SRG/eROSITA uncovers the most X-ray luminous quasar at z>6
P. Medvedev, S. Sazonov, M. Gilfanov, R. Burenin, G. Khorunzhev, A., Meshcheryakov, R. Sunyaev, I. Bikmaev, E. Irtuganov

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of the most X-ray luminous quasar at z>6, using SRG/eROSITA data, revealing insights into supermassive black holes and high-redshift quasar properties.
Contribution
First detection of an extremely X-ray luminous, radio-loud quasar at z>6 with detailed multiwavelength analysis, highlighting the potential of eROSITA for high-redshift quasar studies.
Findings
Quasar CFHQS J142952+544717 is the most X-ray luminous at z>6.
Estimated supermassive black hole mass is around 2 billion solar masses.
X-ray brightness may be linked to radio-loudness and inverse Compton scattering.
Abstract
We report the discovery of X-ray emission from CFHQS J142952+544717, the most distant known radio-loud quasar at z=6.18, on Dec. 10--11, 2019 with the eROSITA telescope on board the SRG satellite during its ongoing all-sky survey. The object was identified by cross-matching an intermediate SRG/eROSITA source catalog with the Pan-STARRS1 distant quasar sample at 5.6 < z < 6.7. The measured flux erg cm s in the 0.3--2 keV energy band corresponds to an X-ray luminosity of erg s in the 2--10 keV rest-frame energy band, which renders CFHQS J142952+544717 the most X-ray luminous quasar ever observed at z > 6. Combining our X-ray measurements with archival and new photometric measurements in other wavebands (radio to optical), we estimate the bolometric luminosity of this quasar at --…
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