Multiwavelength study of massive galaxies at z~2. II. Widespread Compton thick AGN and the concurrent growth of black holes and bulges
E. Daddi, D.M. Alexander, M. Dickinson, R. Gilli, A. Renzini, D., Elbaz, A. Cimatti, R. Chary, D. Frayer, F.E. Bauer, W.N. Brandt, M., Giavalisco, N.A. Grogin, M. Huynh, J. Kurk, M. Mignoli, G. Morrison, A. Pope,, S. Ravindranath

TL;DR
This study reveals a significant population of Compton-thick AGNs at z~2, showing their widespread presence and suggesting concurrent growth of black holes and galaxy bulges during this epoch.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale evidence of widespread Compton-thick AGNs at high redshift, linking their growth to galaxy evolution and star formation.
Findings
Compton-thick AGNs are twice as common as X-ray detected AGNs at z~2.
Mid-IR excess galaxies host heavily obscured AGNs with high column densities.
Black hole growth rates are comparable to star formation rates at z=2.
Abstract
Approximately 20-30% of 1.4<z<2.5 galaxies with K<22 (Vega) detected with Spitzer MIPS at 24um show excess mid-IR emission relative to that expected based on the rates of star formation measured from other multiwavelength data.These galaxies also display some near-IR excess in Spitzer IRAC data, with a spectral energy distribution peaking longward of 1.6um in the rest frame, indicating the presence of warm-dust emission usually absent in star forming galaxies. Stacking Chandra data for the mid-IR excess galaxies yields a significant hard X-ray detection at rest-frame energies >6.2 keV. The stacked X-ray spectrum rises steeply at >10 keV, suggesting that these sources host Compton-thick Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs) with column densities N_H~10^{24} cm^-2 and an average, unobscured X-ray luminosity L_{2-8 keV}~(1-4)x10^43 erg/s. Their sky density(~3200 deg^-2) and space density…
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