A hyperluminous obscured quasar at a redshift of z ~ 4.3
Andreas Efstathiou, Katarzyna Malek, Denis Burgarella, Peter Hurley,, Seb Oliver, Veronique Buat, Raphael Shirley, Steven Duivenvoorden, Vicky, Papadopoulou Lesta, Duncan Farrah, Kenneth J. Duncan, Maria del Carmen Campos, Varillas

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a rare, hyperluminous obscured quasar at z ~ 4.3, using multi-wavelength data and modeling, suggesting many similar objects may exist and impacting black hole evolution theories.
Contribution
First detection of a z > 4 hyperluminous obscured quasar using combined SED modeling, indicating a higher space density than optically selected quasars.
Findings
Luminosity of ~3.91 x 10^{13} L_sun for the quasar
Estimated space density of ~1.8 x 10^{-8} Mpc^{-3} at z ~ 4.5
Obscuring torus covering factor likely > 50%
Abstract
In this work we report the discovery of the hyperluminous galaxy HELP_J100156.75+022344.7 at the photometric redshift of z ~ 4.3. The galaxy was discovered in the Cosmological Evolution Survey (COSMOS) field, one of the fields studied by the Herschel Extragalactic Legacy Project (HELP). We present the spectral energy distribution (SED) of the galaxy and fit it with the CYprus models for Galaxies and their NUclear Spectra (CYGNUS) multi-component radiative transfer models. We find that its emission is dominated by an obscured quasar with a predicted total 1-1000um luminosity of and an active galactic nucleus (AGN) fraction of ~89%. We also fit HELP_J100156.75+022344.7 with the Code Investigating GALaxy Emission (CIGALE) code and find a similar result. This is only the second z > 4 hyperluminous obscured quasar discovered to date. The…
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