The NuSTAR Extragalactic Survey: A First Sensitive Look at the High-Energy Cosmic X-ray Background Population
D. M. Alexander (Durham), D. Stern (JPL), A. Del Moro, G. B. Lansbury,, R. J. Assef, J. Aird, M. Ajello, D. R. Ballantyne, F. E. Bauer, S. E. Boggs,, W. N. Brandt, F. E. Christensen, F. Civano, A. Comastri, W. W. Craig, M., Elvis, B. W. Grefenstette, C. J. Hailey, F. A. Harrison

TL;DR
This study presents the first sensitive census of high-energy X-ray sources detected by NuSTAR, revealing their properties, redshift distribution, and the fraction of obscured and Compton-thick AGNs, and comparing them to local high-energy AGNs.
Contribution
First identification of faint >10 keV X-ray sources by NuSTAR, characterizing their properties and population statistics, and constraining reflection strength and host galaxy masses.
Findings
NuSTAR sources are ~100x fainter than previous detections.
Approximately 50% of sources are obscured with N_H>10^{22} cm^{-2}.
No Compton-thick sources detected among the ten identified.
Abstract
We report on the first ten identifications of sources serendipitously detected by the NuSTAR to provide the first sensitive census of the cosmic X-ray background (CXB) source population at >10 keV. We find that these NuSTAR-detected sources are ~100x fainter than those previously detected at >10 keV and have a broad range in redshift and luminosity (z=0.020-2.923 and L_10-40 keV~4x10^{41}-5x10^{45} erg/s); the median redshift and luminosity are z~0.7 and L_10-40 keV~3x10^{44} erg/s, respectively. We characterize these sources on the basis of broad-band ~0.5-32 keV spectroscopy, optical spectroscopy, and broad-band ultraviolet-to-mid-infrared SED analyzes. We find that the dominant source population is quasars with L_10-40 keV>10^{44} erg/s, of which ~50% are obscured with N_H>10^{22} cm^{-2}. However, none of the ten NuSTAR sources are Compton thick (N_H>10^{24} cm^{-2}) and we place a…
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