The most obscured AGN in the COSMOS field
G. Lanzuisi, M. Perna, I. Delvecchio, S. Berta, M. Brusa, N., Cappelluti, A. Comastri, R. Gilli, C. Gruppioni, M. Mignoli, F. Pozzi, G., Vietri, C. Vignali, G. Zamorani

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and analysis of a highly obscured, luminous AGN at z=0.353 in the COSMOS field, demonstrating multi-wavelength methods to identify such rare objects that are crucial for understanding black hole growth.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive multi-wavelength approach to identify heavily obscured, Compton-thick AGN at low redshift, highlighting their properties and significance.
Findings
The AGN has a column density >10^25 cm^-2, heavily obscuring nuclear emission.
The host galaxy is massive, star-forming, and shows a barred morphology.
Optical emission lines suggest a galactic outflow driven by AGN activity.
Abstract
Highly obscured active galactic nuclei (AGN) are common in nearby galaxies, but are difficult to observe beyond the local Universe, where they are expected to significantly contribute to the black hole accretion rate density. Furthermore, Compton-thick (CT) absorbers (NH>10^24 cm^-2) suppress even the hard X-ray (2-10 keV) AGN nuclear emission, and therefore the column density distribution above 10^24 cm^-2 is largely unknown. We present the identification and multi-wavelength properties of a heavily obscured (NH>~10^25 cm^-2), intrinsically luminous (L(2-10keV)>10^44 erg s^-1) AGN at z=0.353 in the COSMOS field. Several independent indicators, such as the shape of the X-ray spectrum, the decomposition of the spectral energy distribution and X-ray/[NeV] and X-ray/6{\mu}m luminosity ratios, agree on the fact that the nuclear emission must be suppressed by a 10^25 cm^-2 column density.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
