NuSTAR Perspective on High-redshift MeV Blazars
Abstract
With bolometric luminosities exceeding 1048 erg s-1, powerful jets, and supermassive black holes at their center, MeV blazars are some of the most extreme sources in the universe. Recently, the Fermi-Large Area Telescope detected five new γ-ray emitting MeV blazars beyond redshift z = 3.1. With the goal of precisely characterizing the jet properties of these extreme sources, we started a multiwavelength campaign to follow them up with joint Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array, Swift, and the Southeastern Association for Research in Astronomy's optical telescopes. We observe six high-redshift quasars, four of them belonging to the new γ-ray emitting MeV blazars. Thorough X-ray analysis reveals spectral flattening at soft X-ray for three of these objects. The source NVSS J151002+570243 also shows a peculiar rehardening of the X-ray spectrum at energies E > 6 keV. Adopting a one-zone leptonic emission model, this combination of hard X-rays and γ-rays enables us to determine the location of the Inverse Compton peak and to accurately constrain the jet characteristics. In the context of the jet-accretion disk connection, we find that all six sources have jet powers exceeding accretion disk luminosity, seemingly validating this positive correlation even beyond z > 3. Our six sources are found to have ${10}^{9}\,{M}_{\odot }$ black holes, further raising the space density of supermassive black holes in the redshift bin z = [3, 4].
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- February 2020
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2001.01956
- Bibcode:
- 2020ApJ...889..164M
- Keywords:
-
- Active galactic nuclei;
- Blazars;
- High energy astrophysics;
- Jets;
- 16;
- 164;
- 739;
- 870;
- Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
- E-Print:
- 17 pages, 7 figures, 8 tables, 1 appendix, accepted for publication in ApJ