High redshift extremely red quasars in X-rays
Andy D. Goulding, Nadia L. Zakamska, Rachael M. Alexandroff, Roberto, J. Assef, Manda Banerji, Fred Hamann, Dominika Wylezalek, William N. Brandt,, Jenny E. Greene, George B. Lansbury, Isabelle Paris, Gordon Richards, Daniel, Stern, Michael A. Strauss

TL;DR
This study investigates extremely red quasars at high redshift using X-ray observations, revealing they are heavily obscured but not intrinsically X-ray weak, and likely affected by their own outflows.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed X-ray analysis of ERQs, showing they are a highly obscured, borderline Compton-thick population with significant outflows.
Findings
Most ERQs show signs of X-ray absorption with high column densities.
Stacked X-ray emission indicates average N_H of about 8×10^23 cm^-2.
ERQs are not intrinsically underluminous in X-rays for their bolometric luminosity.
Abstract
Quasars may have played a key role in limiting the stellar mass of massive galaxies. Identifying those quasars in the process of removing star formation fuel from their hosts is an exciting ongoing challenge in extragalactic astronomy. In this paper we present X-ray observations of eleven extremely red quasars (ERQs) with erg s at with evidence for high-velocity ( km s) [OIII]5007\AA\ outflows. X-rays allow us to directly probe circumnuclear obscuration and to measure the instantaneous accretion luminosity. We detect ten out of eleven extremely red quasars available in targeted and archival data. Using a combination of X-ray spectral fitting and hardness ratios, we find that all of the ERQs show signs of absorption in the X-rays with inferred column densities of cm, including four…
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