The deepest X-ray view of high-redshift galaxies: constraints on low-rate black-hole accretion
Fabio Vito, Roberto Gilli, Cristian Vignali, William N. Brandt, Andrea, Comastri, Guang Yang, Bret D. Lehmer, Bin Luo, Antara Basu-Zych, Franz E., Bauer, Nico Cappelluti, Anton Koekemoer, Vincenzo Mainieri, Maurizio, Paolillo, Piero Ranalli, Ohad Shemmer, Jonathan Trump

TL;DR
This study uses the deepest X-ray observations to analyze high-redshift galaxies, constraining black hole accretion rates and the faint-end of the AGN luminosity function, revealing star formation dominance and negligible low-rate SMBH growth.
Contribution
First to place constraints on the faint-end of the AGN X-ray luminosity function at z>4 using stacking of deep Chandra data.
Findings
Detected significant X-ray emission from galaxies at z≈4.
Reported high-confidence detection of galaxies at z≈5.
Found low-rate SMBH accretion is negligible compared to active AGN.
Abstract
We exploit the 7 Ms \textit{Chandra} observations in the \chandra\,Deep Field-South (\mbox{CDF-S}), the deepest X-ray survey to date, coupled with CANDELS/GOODS-S data, to measure the total X-ray emission arising from 2076 galaxies at . This aim is achieved by stacking the \textit{Chandra} data at the positions of optically selected galaxies, reaching effective exposure times of . We detect significant () X-ray emission from massive galaxies at . We also report the detection of massive galaxies at at a confidence level (), the highest significance ever obtained for X-ray emission from galaxies at such high redshifts. No significant signal is detected from galaxies at even higher redshifts. The stacking results place constraints on the BHAD associated with the known high-redshift galaxy samples,…
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