Heavily Obscured AGN in Star-Forming Galaxies at z~2
E. Treister (IfA, Hawaii), C. Cardamone, K. Schawinski, C. M. Urry, (Yale), E. Gawiser (Rutgers), S. Virani (Yale), P. Lira (U. de Chile), J., Kartaltepe (NOAO), M Damen, E. N. Taylor (Leiden), E. Le Floc'h (IfA,, Hawaii), Stephen Justham (Peking U.), A. Koekemoer (STScI)

TL;DR
This study identifies and characterizes heavily-obscured AGN in star-forming galaxies at z~2, revealing their properties, prevalence, and potential evolutionary role in galaxy development.
Contribution
It provides evidence for a large population of Compton Thick AGN at high redshift and discusses their implications for galaxy evolution models.
Findings
Approximately 90% of the sample are heavily obscured AGN.
The space density of these AGN at z~2 is about 10^-5 Mpc^-3.
Significant star formation activity is observed in host galaxies.
Abstract
We study the properties of a sample of 211 heavily-obscured Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) candidates in the Extended Chandra Deep Field-South selecting objects with f_24/f_R>1000 and R-K>4.5. Of these, 18 were detected in X-rays and found to be obscured AGN with neutral hydrogen column densities of ~10^23 cm^-2. In the X-ray undetected sample, the following evidence suggests a large fraction of heavily-obscured (Compton Thick) AGN: (i) The stacked X-ray signal of the sample is strong, with an observed ratio of soft to hard X-ray counts consistent with a population of ~90% heavily obscured AGN combined with 10% star-forming galaxies. (ii) The X-ray to mid-IR ratios for these sources are significantly larger than that of star-forming galaxies and ~2 orders of magnitude smaller than for the general AGN population, suggesting column densities of N_H>5x10^24 cm^-2. (iii) The Spitzer near-…
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