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The quest for obscured AGN at cosmological distances: Infrared Power-Law Galaxies

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 Publication date 2006
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We summarize multiwavelength properties of a sample of galaxies in the CDF-N and CDF-S whose Spectral Energy Distributions (SEDs) exhibit the characteristic power-law behavior expected for AGN in the Spitzer/IRAC 3.6-8micron bands. AGN selected this way tend to comprise the majority of high X-ray luminosity AGN, whereas AGN selected via other IRAC color-color criteria might contain more star-formation dominated galaxies. Approximately half of these IR power-law galaxies in the CDF-S are detected in deep (1Ms) Chandra X-ray imaging, although in the CDF-N (2Ms) about 77% are detected at the 3sigma level. The SEDs and X-ray upper limits of the sources not detected in X-rays are consistent with those of obscured AGN, and are significantly different from those of massive star-forming galaxies. About 40% of IR power-law galaxies detected in X-rays have SEDs resembling that of an optical QSO and morphologies dominated by bright point source emission. The remaining 60% have SEDs whose UV and optical continuum are much steeper (obscured) and more extended morphologies than those detected in X-rays. Most of the IR power-law galaxies not detected in X-rays have IR (8-1000micron above 10^12Lsun, and X-ray (upper limits) to mid-IR ratios similar to those of local warm (ie, hosting an AGN) ULIRGs. The SED shapes of power-law galaxies are consistent with the obscured fraction (4:1) as derived from the X-ray column densities, if we assume that all the sources not detected in X-rays are heavily absorbed. IR power-law galaxies may account for between 20% and 50% of the predicted number density of mid-IR detected obscured AGN. The remaining obscured AGN probably have rest-frame SEDs dominated by stellar emission.



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