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Dive into the research topics where C. Saez is active.

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Featured researches published by C. Saez.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

The 2-79 keV X-ray spectrum of the circinus galaxy with NuSTAR, XMM-Newton, and Chandra: a fully Compton-thick active galactic nucleus

P. Arévalo; F. E. Bauer; S. Puccetti; D. J. Walton; Michael Koss; S. E. Boggs; W. N. Brandt; M. Brightman; Finn Erland Christensen; A. Comastri; William W. Craig; F. Fuerst; P. Gandhi; Brian W. Grefenstette; Charles J. Hailey; Fiona A. Harrison; B. Luo; G. M. Madejski; K. K. Madsen; A. Marinucci; G. Matt; C. Saez; D. Stern; M. Stuhlinger; Ezequiel Treister; Claudia M. Urry; William W. Zhang

The Circinus galaxy is one of the closest obscured active galactic nuclei (AGNs), making it an ideal target for detailed study. Combining archival Chandra and XMM-Newton data with new NuSTAR observations, we model the 2-79 keV spectrum to constrain the primary AGN continuum and to derive physical parameters for the obscuring material. Chandras high angular resolution allows a separation of nuclear and off-nuclear galactic emission. In the off-nuclear diffuse emission, we find signatures of strong cold reflection, including high equivalent-width neutral Fe lines. This Compton-scattered off-nuclear emission amounts to 18% of the nuclear flux in the Fe line region, but becomes comparable to the nuclear emission above 30 keV. The new analysis no longer supports a prominent transmitted AGN component in the observed band. We find that the nuclear spectrum is consistent with Compton scattering by an optically thick torus, where the intrinsic spectrum is a power law of photon index Γ = 2.2-2.4, the torus has an equatorial column density of N_H = (6-10) × 10^(24) cm^(–2), and the intrinsic AGN 2-10 keV luminosity is (2.3-5.1) × 10^(42) erg s^(–1). These values place Circinus along the same relations as unobscured AGNs in accretion rate versus Γ and L_X versus L_(IR) phase space. NuSTARs high sensitivity and low background allow us to study the short timescale variability of Circinus at X-ray energies above 10 keV for the first time. The lack of detected variability favors a Compton-thick absorber, in line with the spectral fitting results.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

Weak Hard X-Ray Emission from Broad Absorption Line Quasars: Evidence for Intrinsic X-Ray Weakness

B. Luo; W. N. Brandt; D. M. Alexander; D. Stern; Stacy H. Teng; P. Arévalo; F. E. Bauer; S. E. Boggs; Finn Erland Christensen; A. Comastri; William W. Craig; D. Farrah; P. Gandhi; Charles J. Hailey; Fiona A. Harrison; M. Koss; P. Ogle; S. Puccetti; C. Saez; A. E. Scott; D. J. Walton; William W. Zhang

We report NuSTAR observations of a sample of six X-ray weak broad absorption line (BAL) quasars. These targets, at z=0.148-1.223, are among the optically brightest and most luminous BAL quasars known at z 330 times weaker than expected for typical quasars. Our results from a pilot NuSTAR study of two low-redshift BAL quasars, a Chandra stacking analysis of a sample of high-redshift BAL quasars, and a NuSTAR spectral analysis of the local BAL quasar Mrk 231 have already suggested the existence of intrinsically X-ray weak BAL quasars, i.e., quasars not emitting X-rays at the level expected from their optical/UV emission. The aim of the current program is to extend the search for such extraordinary objects. Three of the six new targets are weakly detected by NuSTAR with 33%) of intrinsically X-ray weak objects among the BAL quasars with significantly weak <10 keV emission. We suggest that intrinsically X-ray weak quasars might be preferentially observed as BAL quasars.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

The NuSTAR Extragalactic Surveys: First Direct Measurements of the > 10 keV X-Ray Luminosity Function for Active Galactic Nuclei at z > 0.1

James Aird; D. M. Alexander; D. R. Ballantyne; F. Civano; A. Del-Moro; R. C. Hickox; G. B. Lansbury; J. R. Mullaney; F. E. Bauer; W. N. Brandt; A. Comastri; A. C. Fabian; P. Gandhi; Fiona A. Harrison; B. Luo; D. Stern; Ezequiel Treister; L. Zappacosta; M. Ajello; Roberto J. Assef; M. Baloković; S. E. Boggs; M. Brightman; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; M. Elvis; K. Forster; Brian W. Grefenstette; Charles J. Hailey; Michael Koss

We present the first direct measurements of the rest-frame 10–40 keV X-ray luminosity function (XLF) of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) based on a sample of 94 sources at 0.1 < z < 3, selected at 8–24 keV energies from sources in the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) extragalactic survey program. Our results are consistent with the strong evolution of the AGN population seen in prior, lower-energy studies of the XLF. However, different models of the intrinsic distribution of absorption, which are used to correct for selection biases, give significantly different predictions for the total number of sources in our sample, leading to small, systematic differences in our binned estimates of the XLF. Adopting a model with a lower intrinsic fraction of Compton-thick sources and a larger population of sources with column densities N_H ~ 10^(23-24) cm^(−2) or a model with stronger Compton reflection component (with a relative normalization of R ~ 2 at all luminosities) can bring extrapolations of the XLF from 2–10 keV into agreement with our NuSTAR sample. Ultimately, X-ray spectral analysis of the NuSTAR sources is required to break this degeneracy between the distribution of absorbing column densities and the strength of the Compton reflection component and thus refine our measurements of the XLF. Furthermore, the models that successfully describe the high-redshift population seen by NuSTAR tend to over-predict previous, high-energy measurements of the local XLF, indicating that there is evolution of the AGN population that is not fully captured by the current models.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

NuSTAR OBSERVATIONS of the POWERFUL RADIO-GALAXY CYGNUS A

Christopher S. Reynolds; Anne M. Lohfink; P. Ogle; Fiona A. Harrison; Kristin K. Madsen; Andrew C. Fabian; Daniel R. Wik; G. M. Madejski; D. R. Ballantyne; Steven E. Boggs; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; F. Fuerst; Charles J. Hailey; Lauranne Lanz; Jon M. Miller; C. Saez; Daniel Stern; D. J. Walton; William W. Zhang

We present NuSTAR observations of the powerful radio galaxy Cygnus A, focusing on the central absorbed active galactic nucleus (AGN). Cygnus A is embedded in a cool-core galaxy cluster, and hence we also examine archival XMM-Newton data to facilitate the decomposition of the spectrum into the AGN and intracluster medium (ICM) components. NuSTAR gives a source-dominated spectrum of the AGN out to >70keV. In gross terms, the NuSTAR spectrum of the AGN has the form of a power law (Gamma~1.6-1.7) absorbed by a neutral column density of N_H~1.6x10^23 cm^-2. However, we also detect curvature in the hard (>10keV) spectrum resulting from reflection by Compton-thick matter out of our line-of-sight to the X-ray source. Compton reflection, possibly from the outer accretion disk or obscuring torus, is required even permitting a high-energy cutoff in the continuum source; the limit on the cutoff energy is E_cut>111keV (90% confidence). Interestingly, the absorbed power-law plus reflection model leaves residuals suggesting the absorption/emission from a fast (15,000-26,000km/s), high column-density (N_W>3x10^23 cm^-2), highly ionized (xi~2,500 erg cm/s) wind. A second, even faster ionized wind component is also suggested by these data. We show that the ionized wind likely carries a significant mass and momentum flux, and may carry sufficient kinetic energy to exercise feedback on the host galaxy. If confirmed, the simultaneous presence of a strong wind and powerful jets in Cygnus A demonstrates that feedback from radio-jets and sub-relativistic winds are not mutually exclusive phases of AGN activity but can occur simultaneously.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

An extragalactic spectroscopic survey of the SSA22 field

C. Saez; B. D. Lehmer; F. E. Bauer; D. Stern; A. Gonzales; I. Rreza; D. M. Alexander; Yuichi Matsuda; J. E. Geach; Fiona A. Harrison; Tomoki Hayashino

We present Very Large Telescope VIMOS, Keck DEIMOS and Keck LRIS multi-object spectra of 367 sources in the field of the z ≈ 3.09 protocluster SSA22. Sources are spectroscopically classified via template matching, allowing new identifications for 206 extragalactic sources, including 36 z > 2 Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs) and Lyman α emitters (LAEs), eight protocluster members, and 94 X-ray sources from the ∼400 ks Chandra deep survey of SSA22. Additionally, in the area covered by our study, we have increased by ≈4, 13, and 6 times the number of reliable redshifts of sources at 1.0 3.4, and with X-ray emission, respectively. We compare our results with past spectroscopic surveys of SSA22 to investigate the completeness of the LBGs and the X-ray properties of the new spectroscopically classified sources in the SSA22 field.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2018

The NuSTAR Extragalactic Surveys: Source catalog and the Compton-thick fraction in the UDS field

A. Masini; F. Civano; A. Comastri; Francesca M. Fornasini; D. R. Ballantyne; G. B. Lansbury; Ezequiel Treister; D. M. Alexander; P. G. Boorman; W. N. Brandt; D. Farrah; P. Gandhi; Fiona A. Harrison; R. C. Hickox; D. Kocevski; Lauranne Lanz; S. Marchesi; S. Puccetti; C. Ricci; C. Saez; D. Stern; L. Zappacosta

We present the results and the source catalog of the NuSTAR survey in the UKIDSS Ultra Deep Survey (UDS) field, bridging the gap in depth and area between NuSTARs ECDFS and COSMOS surveys. The survey covers a


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

Multi-Sightline Observation of Narrow Absorption Lines in Lensed Quasar SDSS J1029+2623

Toru Misawa; C. Saez; Jane C. Charlton; Michael Eracleous; G. Chartas; F. E. Bauer; Naohisa Inada; Hisakazu Uchiyama

\sim 0.6


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

Strong lensing in the inner halo of galaxy clusters

C. Saez; Luis E. Campusano; E. S. Cypriano; L. Sodré; J.-P. Kneib

deg


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

The NuSTAR Extragalactic Surveys: Initial Results and Catalog from the Extended Chandra Deep Field South

J. R. Mullaney; A. Del-Moro; James Aird; D. M. Alexander; F. Civano; R. C. Hickox; G. B. Lansbury; M. Ajello; Roberto J. Assef; D. R. Ballantyne; M. Baloković; F. E. Bauer; W. N. Brandt; S. E. Boggs; M. Brightman; Finn Erland Christensen; A. Comastri; William W. Craig; M. Elvis; K. Forster; P. Gandhi; Brian W. Grefenstette; Charles J. Hailey; Fiona A. Harrison; M. Koss; Stephanie M. LaMassa; B. Luo; K. K. Madsen; S. Puccetti; C. Saez

^2


The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

The NuSTAR Serendipitous Survey: Hunting for the most extreme obscured AGN at >10 keV

G. B. Lansbury; D. M. Alexander; James Aird; P. Gandhi; D. Stern; M. Koss; Isabella Lamperti; M. Ajello; A. Annuar; Roberto J. Assef; D. R. Ballantyne; M. Baloković; F. E. Bauer; W. N. Brandt; M. Brightman; Chien-Ting J. Chen; F. Civano; A. Comastri; A. Del Moro; C. Fuentes; Fiona A. Harrison; S. Marchesi; A. Masini; J. R. Mullaney; C. Ricci; C. Saez; John A. Tomsick; Ezequiel Treister; D. J. Walton; L. Zappacosta

area of the field for a total observing time of

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Fiona A. Harrison

California Institute of Technology

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F. E. Bauer

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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W. N. Brandt

Pennsylvania State University

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D. Stern

California Institute of Technology

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P. Gandhi

University of Southampton

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D. R. Ballantyne

Georgia Institute of Technology

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