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The most luminous blue quasars at 3.0<z<3.3. II. CIV/X-ray emission and accretion disc physics

Authors :
Lusso, Elisabeta
Nardini, Emanuele
Bisogni, Susanna
Risaliti, Guido
Gilli, Roberto
Richards, Gordon T.
Salvestrini, Francesco
Vignali, Cristian
Bargiacchi, Giada
Civano, Francesca
Elvis, Martin
Fabbiano, Giuseppina
Marconi, Alessandro
Sacchi, Andrea
Signorini, Matilde
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

We analyse the properties of the CIV broad emission line in connection with the X-ray emission of 30 bright SDSS quasars at z~3.0-3.3 with pointed XMM-Newton observations, which were selected to test the suitability of AGN as cosmological tools. In our previous work, we found that a large fraction (~25%) of the quasars in this sample are X-ray underluminous by factors of &gt;3-10. As absorbing columns of &gt;10$^{23}$ cm$^{-2}$ can be safely ruled out, their weakness is most likely intrinsic. Here we explore possible correlations between the UV and X-ray features of these sources to investigate the origin of X-ray weakness. We fit their UV SDSS spectra and analyse their CIV properties (e.g., equivalent width, EW; line peak velocity, $\upsilon_{\rm peak}$) as a function of the X-ray photon index and 2-10 keV flux. We confirm the trends of CIV $\upsilon_{\rm peak}$ and EW with UV luminosity at 2500 angstrom for both X-ray weak and X-ray normal quasars, as well as the correlation between X-ray weakness and CIV EW. In contrast to some recent work, we do not observe any clear relation between the 2-10 keV luminosity and $\upsilon_{\rm peak}$. We find a correlation between the hard X-ray flux and the integrated CIV flux for X-ray normal quasars, whilst X-ray weak quasars deviate from the main trend by more than 0.5 dex. We argue that X-ray weakness might be interpreted in a starved X-ray corona picture associated with an ongoing disc-wind phase. If the wind is ejected in the vicinity of the black hole, the extreme-UV radiation that reaches the corona will be depleted, depriving the corona of seeds photons and generating an X-ray weak quasar. Yet, at the largest UV luminosities (&gt;10$^{47}$ erg s$^{-1}$), there will still be an ample reservoir of ionising photons that can explain the excess CIV emission observed in the X-ray weak quasars with respect to normal sources of similar X-ray luminosities.&lt;br /&gt;Comment: 22 pages, 15 figures (with 3 more figures in the Appendix), abstract abridged. Accepted for publication in A&amp;A

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2107.02806
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202141356