The complicated nature of the X-ray emission from the field of the strongly lensed hyperluminous infrared galaxy PJ1053+60 at z=3.549
Carlos Garcia Diaz, Q. Daniel Wang, Kevin C. Harrington, James D. Lowenthal, Patrick S. Kamieneski, Eric F. Jimenez-Andrade, Nicholas Foo, Min S. Yun, Brenda L. Frye, Dazhi Zhou, Amit Vishwas, Ilsang Yoon, Belen Alcalde Pampliega, Daizhong Liu, and Massimo Pascale

TL;DR
This study analyzes X-ray data of a distant, strongly lensed hyperluminous infrared galaxy, revealing complex emission likely influenced by multiple active galactic nuclei and highlighting the need for higher resolution observations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed decomposition of X-ray emission in PJ1053+60, identifying potential multiple AGNs and emphasizing observational limitations.
Findings
Unusually high X-ray luminosity from HMXB component
Detection of a possible additional foreground AGN
Limitations of current X-ray observatories for such studies
Abstract
We present an analysis of XMM-Newton X-ray observations of PJ1053+60, a hyperluminous infrared galaxy (HyLIRG) at z=3.549 that is strongly lensed by a foreground group at z=0.837. We also present GNIRS spectroscopy confirming the presence of an active galactic nucleus (AGN) to the southwest of PJ1053+60 () at = 1.373 0.006. Using this redshift prior, we decompose the X-ray spectrum of PJ1053+60 into and high-mass X-ray binary (HMXB) components from the HyLIRG. The HMXB component has an unusually high luminosity, 50 times higher than calibration derived from local galaxies, and a characteristic photon index likely too flat to be caused by high-mass X-ray binaries at rest frame energies above a few keV. Our 2-D spatial decomposition also suggests a similarly high X-ray HMXB luminosity, although the limited spatial resolution prevents meaningful…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
