A Candidate Dual AGN at z=1.175
R. Scott Barrows, Daniel Stern, Kristin Madsen, Fiona Harrison,, Roberto J. Assef, Julia M. Comerford, Michael C. Cushing, Christopher D., Fassnacht, Anthony Gonzalez, Roger Griffith, Ryan Hickox, J. Davy, Kirkpatrick, and David J. Lagattuta

TL;DR
This paper reports the identification of a candidate dual AGN at redshift 1.175, using multi-wavelength data, and discusses the challenges in confirming dual AGN status due to obscuration and complex emission line profiles.
Contribution
It presents the highest redshift candidate dual AGN, combining X-ray, optical, and infrared data to analyze its properties and explore the nature of its double-peaked emission lines.
Findings
The source is heavily obscured with a high column density.
It has a high X-ray luminosity (~10^45 erg s^-1).
AO imaging shows only a single source, suggesting possible obscuration of a second AGN.
Abstract
The X-ray source CXOXBJ142607.6+353351 (CXOJ1426+35), which was identified in a 172 ks Chandra image in the Bootes field, shows double-peaked rest-frame optical/UV emission lines, separated by 0.69" (5.5 kpc) in the spatial dimension and by 690 km s^-1 in the velocity dimension. The high excitation lines and emission line ratios indicate both systems are ionized by an AGN continuum, and the double-peaked profile resembles that of candidate dual AGN. At a redshift of z=1.175, this source is the highest redshift candidate dual AGN yet identified. However, many sources have similar emission line profiles for which other interpretations are favored. We have analyzed the substantial archival data available in this field, as well as acquired near-infrared (NIR) adaptive optics (AO) imaging and NIR slit spectroscopy. The X-ray spectrum is hard, implying a column density of several 10^23 cm^-2.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
