The X-ray luminosity function of Active Galactic Nuclei in the redshift interval z=3-5
A. Georgakakis, J. Aird, J. Buchner, M. Salvato, M.-L. Menzel, W. N., Brandt, I. D. McGreer, T. Dwelly, G. Mountrichas, K. Koki, I., Georgantopoulos, L.-T. Hsu, A. Merloni, Z. Liu, K. Nandra, N. P. Ross

TL;DR
This study estimates the evolution of the AGN X-ray luminosity function at redshifts 3-5 using combined deep and wide-area X-ray surveys, revealing luminosity-dependent evolution and implications for cosmic reionization.
Contribution
It provides a model-independent Bayesian analysis of the AGN luminosity function evolution at high redshift, incorporating photometric redshift uncertainties and comparing X-ray and UV/optical AGN populations.
Findings
Strong evolution of the luminosity function between z=3-4 and z=4-5.
Faint AGN space density drops by a factor of 5 at high redshift.
X-ray AGN are insufficient to keep the universe ionised at z>4.
Abstract
We combine deep X-ray survey data from the Chandra observatory and the wide-area/shallow XMM-XXL field to estimate the AGN X-ray luminosity function in the redshift range z=3-5. The sample consists of nearly 340 sources with either photometric (212) or spectroscopic (128) redshift in the above range. The combination of deep and shallow survey fields provides a luminosity baseline of three orders of magnitude, Lx(2-10keV)~1e43-1e46erg/s at z>3. We follow a Bayesian approach to determine the binned AGN space density and explore their evolution in a model-independent way. Our methodology accounts for Poisson errors in the determination of X-ray fluxes and uncertainties in photometric redshift estimates. We demonstrate that the latter is essential for unbiased measurement of space densities. We find that the AGN X-ray luminosity function evolves strongly between the redshift intervals z=3-4…
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