Linking the X-ray and infrared properties of star-forming galaxies at z<1.5
M. Symeonidis, A. Georgakakis, M. J. Page, J. Bock, M. Bonzini, V., Buat, D. Farrah, A. Franceschini, E. Ibar, D. Lutz, B. Magnelli, G. Magdis,, S.J. Oliver, M. Pannella, M. Paolillo, D. Rosario, I.G. Roseboom, M. Vaccari, and C. Villforth

TL;DR
This study analyzes the X-ray and infrared properties of high-redshift star-forming galaxies, finding a consistent linear correlation between X-ray and IR luminosities and no significant evolution with redshift, after removing AGN contamination.
Contribution
It provides the most comprehensive analysis to date of X-ray emission from star formation in IR-luminous galaxies at z<1.5, using deep Chandra data and stacking techniques.
Findings
X-ray/IR correlation is approximately linear across the studied range.
No significant evolution of L_X/L_IR ratio with redshift.
X-ray emission is not significantly attenuated by dust in host galaxies.
Abstract
We present the most complete study to date of the X-ray emission from star-formation in high redshift (median z=0.7; z<1.5), IR-luminous (L_IR=10^10-10^13 L_sun) galaxies detected by Herschel's PACS and SPIRE instruments. For our purpose we take advantage of the deepest X-ray data to date, the Chandra deep fields (North and South). Sources which host AGN are removed from our analysis by means of multiple AGN indicators. We find an AGN fraction of 18+/-2 per cent amongst our sample and note that AGN entirely dominate at values of log[L_X/L_IR]>-3 in both hard and soft X-ray bands. From the sources which are star-formation dominated, only a small fraction are individually X-ray detected and for the bulk of the sample we calculate average X-ray luminosities through stacking. We find an average soft X-ray to infrared ratio of log[L_SX/L_IR]=-4.3 and an average hard X-ray to infrared ratio…
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