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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 detectable in X-rays if they exist at even larger redshifts. The present observations hint at two exciting discoveries. An extended X-ray source 23 arcsec from SDSS1306+0356 may be a jet emitting inverse Compton radiation from the Cosmic Microwave Background. SDSS 1030+0524 does not appear to be a point source, and may be a gravitationally lensed system, or contain a small scale X-ray jet.
We report on submillimetre observations of three high redshift (z>6) quasars, made using the SCUBA camera on the JCMT. Only one of the sample was detected at 850um-- SDSS J1148+5251 (z=6.43). It was also detected (>3 sigma significance) at 450um, one
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
We are carrying out sensitive X-ray observations with Chandra and XMM of type II quasars selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey based on their optical emission line properties. We present observations of four objects at redshifts 0.4 < z < 0.8 an
We report on exploratory Chandra observations of the three highest redshift quasars known (z = 5.82, 5.99, and 6.28), all found in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. These data, combined with a previous XMM-Newton observation of a z = 5.74 quasar, form a
We study the mass of quasar-hosting dark matter halos at z $sim$ 6 and further constrain the fraction of dark matter halos hosting an active quasar $f_{on}$ and the quasar beaming angle $i_{rm max}$ using observations of CII lines in the literature.