NuSTAR Observations of Four Mid-IR Selected Dual AGN Candidates in Galaxy Mergers
Ryan W. Pfeifle, Kimberly Weaver, Shobita Satyapal, Claudio Ricci,, Nathan J. Secrest, Mario Gliozzi, Laura Blecha, Barry Rothberg

TL;DR
This study uses NuSTAR and XMM-Newton observations to investigate the obscuration and properties of four mid-IR selected dual AGN candidates in galaxy mergers, revealing high column densities and the importance of high-energy X-ray data.
Contribution
First detailed X-ray analysis of mid-IR selected dual AGN candidates in galaxy mergers, highlighting the significance of high-energy observations for understanding obscuration.
Findings
One candidate detected as a single source with high obscuration.
Three candidates not detected, implying very high column densities.
J0841+0101 has a column density exceeding 10^{24} cm^{-2}, larger than previous estimates.
Abstract
Mergers of galaxies are a ubiquitous phenomenon in the Universe and represent a natural consequence of the ``bottom-up'' mass accumulation and galaxy evolution cosmological paradigm. It is generally accepted that the peak of AGN accretion activity occurs at nuclear separations of kpc for major mergers. Here we present new NuSTAR and XMM-Newton observations for a subsample of mid-IR preselected dual AGN candidates in an effort to better constrain the column densities along the line-of-sight for each system. Only one dual AGN candidate, J0841+0101, is detected as a single, unresolved source in the XMM-Newton and NuSTAR imaging, while the remaining three dual AGN candidates, J0122+0100, J1221+1137, and J1306+0735, are not detected with NuSTAR; if these non-detections are due to obscuration alone, these systems are consistent with being absorbed by column densities of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
