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The High Energy X-ray Probe (HEX-P): Bringing the Cosmic X-ray Background into Focus

Authors :
Civano, Francesca
Zhao, Xiurui
Boorman, Peter
Marchesi, Stefano
Ananna, Tonima
Creech, Samantha
Chen, Chien-Ting
Hickox, Ryan
Stern, Daniel
Madsen, Kristin
García, Javier A.
Silver, Ross
Aird, James
Alexander, David M.
Balokovíc, Mislav
Brandt, William N.
Buchner, Johannes
Gandhi, Poshak
Kammoun, Elias
LaMassa, Stephanie
Lanzuisi, Giorgio
Merloni, Andrea
Moretti, Alberto
Nandra, Kirpal
Nardini, Emanuele
Pizzetti, Anrealuna
Puccetti, Simonetta
Pfeifle, Ryan
Ricci, Claudio
Spiga, Daniele
Torres-Albá, Nuria
Collaboration, the HEX-P
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Since the discovery of the cosmic X-ray background (CXB), astronomers have strived to understand the accreting supermassive black holes (SMBHs) contributing to its peak in the 10-40 keV band. Existing soft X-ray telescopes could study this population up to only 10 keV, and, while NuSTAR (focusing on 3--24 keV) made great progress, it also left significant uncertainties in characterizing the hard X-ray population, crucial for calibrating current population synthesis models. This paper presents an in-depth analysis of simulations of two extragalactic surveys (deep and wide) with the High-Energy X-ray Probe (HEX-P), each observed for 2 Ms. Applying established source detection techniques, we show that HEX-P surveys will reach a flux of $\sim$10$^{-15}$ erg s$^{-1}$ cm$^{-2}$ in the 10-40 keV band, an order of magnitude fainter than current NuSTAR surveys. With the large sample of new hard X-ray detected sources ($\sim2000$), we showcase HEX-P's ability to resolve more than 80% of the CXB up to 40 keV into individual sources. The expected precision of HEX-P's resolved background measurement will allow us to distinguish between population synthesis models of SMBH growth. HEX-P leverages accurate broadband (0.5-40 keV) spectral analysis and the combination of soft and hard X-ray colors to provide obscuration constraints even for the fainter sources, with the overall objective of measuring the Compton-thick fraction. With unprecedented sensitivity in the 10--40 keV band, HEX-P will explore the hard X-ray emission from AGN to flux limits never reached before, thus expanding the parameter space for serendipitous discoveries. Consequently, it is plausible that new models will be needed to capture the population HEX-P will unveil.<br />Comment: 28 pages, 13 Figures, 2 tables; submitted to Frontiers in Astronomy and Space Sciences; minor edits in the text, abstract and figure labels

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2311.04832
Document Type :
Working Paper