Weak Hard X-ray Emission from Broad Absorption Line Quasars: Evidence for Intrinsic X-ray Weakness
B. Luo, W. N. Brandt, D. M. Alexander, D. Stern, S. H. Teng, P., Ar\'evalo, F. E. Bauer, S. E. Boggs, F. E. Christensen, A. Comastri, W. W., Craig, D. Farrah, P. Gandhi, C. J. Hailey, F. A. Harrison, M. Koss, P. Ogle,, S. Puccetti, C. Saez, A. E. Scott, D. J. Walton

TL;DR
This study uses NuSTAR observations to identify a significant population of intrinsically X-ray weak broad absorption line quasars, challenging the assumption that their X-ray weakness is solely due to absorption.
Contribution
It provides evidence that some BAL quasars are intrinsically X-ray weak, not just absorbed, expanding understanding of quasar emission mechanisms.
Findings
Over 33% of BAL quasars are intrinsically X-ray weak.
Hard X-ray weakness is not solely due to Compton-thick absorption.
Some BAL quasars lack expected X-ray emission despite soft photon indices.
Abstract
We report NuSTAR observations of a sample of six X-ray weak broad absorption line (BAL) quasars. These targets, at z=0.148-1.223, are among the optically brightest and most luminous BAL quasars known at z<1.3. However, their rest-frame 2 keV luminosities are 14 to >330 times weaker than expected for typical quasars. Our results from a pilot NuSTAR study of two low-redshift BAL quasars, a Chandra stacking analysis of a sample of high-redshift BAL quasars, and a NuSTAR spectral analysis of the local BAL quasar Mrk 231 have already suggested the existence of intrinsically X-ray weak BAL quasars, i.e., quasars not emitting X-rays at the level expected from their optical/UV emission. The aim of the current program is to extend the search for such extraordinary objects. Three of the six new targets are weakly detected by NuSTAR with <45 counts in the 3-24 keV band, and the other three are not…
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