The most luminous blue quasars at 3.0 < z < 3.3. II. C IV/X-ray emission and accretion disc physics
Abstract
We analyse the properties of the high-ionisation C IVλ1549 broad emission line in connection with the X-ray emission of 30 bright, optically selected quasars at z ≃ 3.0−3.3 with pointed XMM-Newton observations, which were selected to test the suitability of active galactic nuclei as cosmological tools. In our previous work, we found that a large fraction (≈25%) of the quasars in this sample are X-ray under-luminous by factors of > 3−10. As absorbing columns of ≳1023 cm−2 can be safely ruled out, their weakness is most likely intrinsic. Here we explore possible correlations between the UV and X-ray features of these sources to investigate the origin of X-ray weakness with respect to X-ray-normal quasars at similar redshifts. We fit the UV spectra from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey of the quasars in our sample and analyse their C IV properties - for example equivalent width (EW) and line peak velocity (υpeak) - as a function of the X-ray photon index and 2−10 keV flux. We confirm the statistically significant trends of C IVυpeak and EW with UV luminosity at 2500 Å for both X-ray-weak and X-ray-normal quasars, as well as the correlation between X-ray weakness (parametrised through Δαox) and C IV EW. In contrast to some recent work, we do not observe any clear relation between the 2−10 keV luminosity and υpeak. We find a statistically significant correlation between the hard X-ray flux and the integrated C IV flux for X-ray-normal quasars, which extends across more than three (two) decades in C IV (X-ray) luminosity, whilst X-ray-weak quasars deviate from the main trend by more than 0.5 dex. We argue that X-ray weakness might be interpreted in a starved X-ray corona picture associated with an ongoing disc-wind phase. If the wind is ejected in the vicinity of the black hole, the extreme-UV radiation that reaches the corona will be depleted, depriving the corona of seed photons and generating an X-ray-weak quasar. Nonetheless, at the largest UV luminosities (> 1047 erg s−1) there will still be an ample reservoir of ionising photons that can explain the `excess' C IV emission observed in the X-ray-weak quasars with respect to normal sources of similar X-ray luminosities.
- Publication:
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Astronomy and Astrophysics
- Pub Date:
- September 2021
- DOI:
- 10.1051/0004-6361/202141356
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2107.02806
- Bibcode:
- 2021A&A...653A.158L
- Keywords:
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- galaxies: active;
- quasars: general;
- quasars: supermassive black holes;
- methods: statistical;
- Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies;
- Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
- E-Print:
- 22 pages, 15 figures (with 3 more figures in the Appendix), abstract abridged. Accepted for publication in A&