The HELLAS2XMM survey. V. Near-Infrared observations of X-ray sources with extreme X/O ratios
M. Mignoli (1), L. Pozzetti (1), A. Comastri (1), M. Brusa (1,2), P., Ciliegi (1), F. Cocchia (3), F. Fiore (3), F. La Franca (4), R. Maiolino (5),, G. Matt (4), S. Molendi (6), G.C. Perola (4), S. Puccetti (3), P. Severgnini, (7), C. Vignali (1) ((1) INAF-OA Bologna

TL;DR
This study investigates near-infrared properties of X-ray sources with high X/O ratios, revealing they are mostly obscured quasars hosted by massive elliptical galaxies at redshifts around 1.
Contribution
First detailed near-infrared analysis of high X/O ratio X-ray sources, linking their properties to obscured quasars and massive galaxy hosts at high redshift.
Findings
Most sources are obscured (Type II) quasars with high X-ray luminosity.
Hosts are predominantly elliptical galaxies at z~1.
Objects are among the most massive spheroids at their epoch.
Abstract
We present the results of deep near-infrared observations of 11 hard X-ray selected sources in the Hellas2XMM survey, with faint optical magnitude (R>24) and high X-ray-to-optical flux ratio. All but one of the sources have been detected in the Ks band, with bright counterparts (Ks<19) and red colors (R-K>5), and therefore belong to the ERO population. A detailed analysis of the surface brightness profiles allows us to classify all of the NIR counterparts. There are 2 point-like objects, 7 elliptical galaxies and one source with a disky profile. None of the extended sources shows any evidence for the presence of a central unresolved object tracing the putative X-ray emitting AGN. Using both the R-K colors and the morphological information, we have estimated for all the sources a ``minimum photometric redshift'', ranging between 0.8 and 2.4; the elliptical hosts have zmin=0.9-1.4. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
