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We report Chandra detection of three UV bright radio quiet quasars at $zgtrsim5$. We have collected a sufficient number of photons to extract an X-ray spectrum of each quasar to measure their basic X-ray properties, such as the X-ray flux, power law photon index ($Gamma$), and optical-to-X-ray spectral slope ($alpha_{rm OX}$). J074749+115352 at $z=5.26$ is the X-ray brightest radio-quiet quasar at $z>5$. It may have a short timescale variation (on a timescale of $sim3800rm~s$ in the observers frame, or $sim600rm~s$ in the rest frame) which is however largely embedded in the statistical noise. We extract phase folded spectra of this quasar. There are two distinguishable states: a high soft state with an average X-ray flux $sim2.7$ times of the low hard state, and a significantly steeper X-ray spectral slope ($Gamma=2.40_{-0.32}^{+0.33}$ vs $1.78_{-0.24}^{+0.25}$). We also compare the three quasars detected in this paper to other quasar samples. We find that J074749+115352, with a SMBH mass of $M_{rm SMBH}approx1.8times10^9rm~M_odot$ and an Eddington ratio of $lambda_{rm Edd}approx2.3$, is extraordinarily X-ray bright. It has an average $alpha_{rm OX}=-1.46pm0.02$ and a 2-10 keV bolometric correction factor of $L_{rm bol}/L_{rm2-10keV}=42.4pm5.8$, both significantly depart from some well defined scaling relations. We compare $Gamma$ of the three quasars to other samples at different redshifts, and do not find any significant redshift evolution based on the limited sample of $z>5$ quasars with reliable measurements of the X-ray spectral properties.
The X-ray luminosity function of distant (3<z<5.1) unabsorbed quasars has been measured. A sample of distant high-luminosity quasars ($10^{45} leq L_{{rm X},2-10} < 7.5 times 10^{45}$ erg/s in the 2--10 keV energy band) from the catalog given in Khor
We present new X-ray observations of luminous heavily dust-reddened quasars (HRQs) selected from infrared sky surveys. HRQs appear to be a dominant population at high redshifts and the highest luminosities, and may be associated with a transitional b
Chandra snapshot observations of the three most distant quasars then known, at redshifts 5.82, 5.99, and 6.28, gave signficant detections even in the short, 6 -- 8 ks, observations. The X-ray to optical luminosity ratios indicate that quasars will be
We present a comprehensive analysis of Chandra X-ray observations of 15 young radio quasars at redshifts $4.5 < z < 5.0$. All sources are detected in the $0.5-7.0$ keV energy band. Emission spectra are extracted, and the average photon index for the
We present the discovery and properties of DESJ014132.4-542749.9 (DES0141-54), a new powerful radio-loud active galactic nucleus (AGN) in the early Universe (z=5.0). It was discovered by cross-matching the first data release of the Dark Energy Survey