An XMM-Newton study of Hyper-Luminous Infrared Galaxies
A. Ruiz, F.J. Carrera, F. Panessa (IFCA (CSIC - Uc))

TL;DR
This study systematically analyzes the X-ray spectral properties of 14 Hyper-Luminous Infrared Galaxies (HLIRGs), revealing diverse AGN and starburst contributions, and suggesting a connection between their X-ray and infrared emissions.
Contribution
First systematic X-ray spectral analysis of HLIRGs, correlating their properties with IR data and revealing heterogeneity in their emission mechanisms.
Findings
All detected HLIRGs have AGN-dominated X-ray spectra.
Most X-ray luminosities are consistent with pure AGN contribution.
X-ray emission is systematically below expected for standard QSOs, indicating absorption or spectral differences.
Abstract
Hyper-Luminous Infrared Galaxies (HLIRGs) are the most luminous persistent objects in the Universe. They exhibit extremely high star formation rates, and most of them seem to harbour an AGN. They are unique laboratories to investigate utmost star formation, and its connection to super-massive black hole growth. X-ray studies of HLIRGs have the potential to unravel the AGN contribution to the bolometric output from these bright objects. We have selected a sample of 14 HLIRGs observed by XMM-Newton (type 1, type 2 AGN and starburst), 5 of which are candidates to be Compton-thick objects. This is the first time that a systematic study of this type of objects is carried out in the X-ray spectral band. Their X-ray spectral properties have been correlated with their IR luminosities, estimated by IRAS, ISO and sub-mm data. The X-ray spectra of HLIRGs present heterogeneous properties. All…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations
