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The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

THE NuSTAR EXTRAGALACTIC SURVEY: A FIRST SENSITIVE LOOK AT THE HIGH-ENERGY COSMIC X-RAY BACKGROUND POPULATION

D. M. Alexander; D. Stern; A. Del Moro; G. B. Lansbury; Roberto J. Assef; James Aird; M. Ajello; D. R. Ballantyne; F. E. Bauer; S. E. Boggs; W. N. Brandt; Finn Erland Christensen; F. Civano; A. Comastri; William W. Craig; M. Elvis; Brian W. Grefenstette; Charles J. Hailey; Fiona A. Harrison; R. C. Hickox; B. Luo; Kristin K. Madsen; J. R. Mullaney; Matteo Perri; S. Puccetti; C. Saez; Ezequiel Treister; Claudia M. Urry; William W. Zhang; C. Bridge

We report on the first 10 identifications of sources serendipitously detected by the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) to provide the first sensitive census of the cosmic X-ray background source population at ≳10 keV. We find that these NuSTAR-detected sources are ≈100 times fainter than those previously detected at ≳10 keV and have a broad range in redshift and luminosity (z = 0.020-2.923 and L_(10-40 keV) ≈ 4 × 10^(41)-5 × 10^(45) erg s^(–1)); the median redshift and luminosity are z ≈ 0.7 and L_(10-40 keV) ≈ 3 × 10^(44) erg s^(–1), respectively. We characterize these sources on the basis of broad-band ≈0.5-32 keV spectroscopy, optical spectroscopy, and broad-band ultraviolet-to-mid-infrared spectral energy distribution analyses. We find that the dominant source population is quasars with L_(10-40 keV) > 10^(44) erg s^(–1), of which ≈50% are obscured with N_H ≳ 10^(22) cm^(–2). However, none of the 10 NuSTAR sources are Compton thick (N_H ≳ 10^(24) cm^(–2)) and we place a 90% confidence upper limit on the fraction of Compton-thick quasars (L_(10-40 keV) > 10^(44) erg s^(–1)) selected at ≳10 keV of ≾33% over the redshift range z = 0.5-1.1. We jointly fitted the rest-frame ≈10-40 keV data for all of the non-beamed sources with L_(10-40 keV) > 10^(43) erg s^(–1) to constrain the average strength of reflection; we find R < 1.4 for Γ = 1.8, broadly consistent with that found for local active galactic nuclei (AGNs) observed at ≳10 keV. We also constrain the host-galaxy masses and find a median stellar mass of ≈10^(11) M_☉, a factor ≈5 times higher than the median stellar mass of nearby high-energy selected AGNs, which may be at least partially driven by the order of magnitude higher X-ray luminosities of the NuSTAR sources. Within the low source-statistic limitations of our study, our results suggest that the overall properties of the NuSTAR sources are broadly similar to those of nearby high-energy selected AGNs but scaled up in luminosity and mass.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

The ALLWISE motion survey and the quest for cold subdwarfs

J. Davy Kirkpatrick; Adam C. Schneider; Sergio Bernabe Fajardo-Acosta; Christopher R. Gelino; Gregory N. Mace; Edward L. Wright; Sarah E. Logsdon; Ian S. McLean; Michael C. Cushing; Michael F. Skrutskie; Peter R. M. Eisenhardt; Daniel Stern; M. Baloković; Adam J. Burgasser; Jacqueline K. Faherty; G. B. Lansbury; Jeffrey A. Rich; N. Skrzypek; John W. Fowler; Roc Michael Cutri; Frank J. Masci; Tim Conrow; Carl J. Grillmair; Howard L. McCallon; Charles A. Beichman; Kenneth A. Marsh

The AllWISE processing pipeline has measured motions for all objects detected on Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) images taken between 2010 January and 2011 February. In this paper, we discuss new capabilities made to the software pipeline in order to make motion measurements possible, and we characterize the resulting data products for use by future researchers. Using a stringent set of selection criteria, we find 22,445 objects that have significant AllWISE motions, of which 3525 have motions that can be independently confirmed from earlier Two Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS) images, yet lack any published motions in SIMBAD. Another 58 sources lack 2MASS counterparts and are presented as motion candidates only. Limited spectroscopic follow-up of this list has already revealed eight new L subdwarfs. These may provide the first hints of a “subdwarf gap” at mid-L types that would indicate the break between the stellar and substellar populations at low metallicities (i.e., old ages). Another object in the motion list--WISEA J154045.67-510139.3--is a bright (J ≈ 9 mag) object of type M6; both the spectrophotometric distance and a crude preliminary parallax place it ~6 pc from the Sun. We also compare our list of motion objects to the recently published list of 762 WISE motion objects from Luhman. While these first large motion studies with WISE data have been very successful in revealing previously overlooked nearby dwarfs, both studies missed objects that the other found, demonstrating that many other nearby objects likely await discovery in the AllWISE data products.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

The NuSTAR view of nearby compton-thick active galactic nuclei: the cases of NGC 424, NGC 1320, and IC 2560

M. Baloković; A. Comastri; Fiona A. Harrison; D. M. Alexander; D. R. Ballantyne; F. E. Bauer; S. E. Boggs; W. N. Brandt; M. Brightman; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; A. Del Moro; P. Gandhi; Charles J. Hailey; M. Koss; G. B. Lansbury; B. Luo; G. M. Madejski; A. Marinucci; G. Matt; Craig B. Markwardt; S. Puccetti; Christopher S. Reynolds; G. Risaliti; E. Rivers; D. Stern; D. J. Walton; William W. Zhang

We present X-ray spectral analyses for three Seyfert 2 active galactic nuclei (AGNs), NGC 424, NGC 1320, and IC 2560, observed by NuSTAR in the 3–79 keV band. The high quality hard X-ray spectra allow detailed modeling of the Compton reflection component for the first time in these sources. Using quasi-simultaneous NuSTAR and Swift/XRT data, as well as archival XMM-Newton data, we find that all three nuclei are obscured by Compton-thick material with column densities in excess of ~5 × 10^(24) cm^(−2), and that their X-ray spectra above 3 keV are dominated by reflection of the intrinsic continuum on Compton-thick material. Due to the very high obscuration, absorbed intrinsic continuum components are not formally required by the data in any of the sources. We constrain the intrinsic photon indices and the column density of the reflecting medium through the shape of the reflection spectra. Using archival multi-wavelength data we recover the intrinsic X-ray luminosities consistent with the broadband spectral energy distributions. Our results are consistent with the reflecting medium being an edge-on clumpy torus with a relatively large global covering factor and overall reflection efficiency of the order of 1%. Given the unambiguous confirmation of the Compton-thick nature of the sources, we investigate whether similar sources are likely to be missed by commonly used selection criteria for Compton-thick AGNs, and explore the possibility of finding their high-redshift counterparts.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

NuSTAR REVEALS EXTREME ABSORPTION IN z<0.5 TYPE 2 QUASARS

G. B. Lansbury; P. Gandhi; D. M. Alexander; Roberto J. Assef; James Aird; A. Annuar; D. R. Ballantyne; M. Baloković; F. E. Bauer; S. E. Boggs; W. N. Brandt; M. Brightman; Finn Erland Christensen; F. Civano; A. Comastri; William W. Craig; A. Del Moro; Brian W. Grefenstette; Charles J. Hailey; Fiona A. Harrison; R. C. Hickox; M. Koss; Stephanie M. LaMassa; Birong Luo; S. Puccetti; D. Stern; Ezequiel Treister; C. Vignali; L. Zappacosta; William W. Zhang

The intrinsic column density (N_H) distribution of quasars is poorly known. At the high obscuration end of the quasar population and for redshifts z 1.5 × 10^(24) cm^(−2)) type 2 quasars (CTQSO2s); five new NuSTAR observations are reported herein, and four have been previously published. The candidate CTQSO2s lie at z < 0.5, have observed [O III] luminosities in the range 8.4 < log(L_([O III])/L⊙) < 9.6, and show evidence for extreme, Compton-thick absorption when indirect absorption diagnostics are considered. Among the nine candidate CTQSO2s, five are detected by NuSTAR in the high-energy (8–24 keV) band: two are weakly detected at the ≈3σ confidence level and three are strongly detected with sufficient counts for spectral modeling (≳90 net source counts at 8–24 keV). For these NuSTAR-detected sources direct (i.e., X-ray spectral) constraints on the intrinsic active galactic nucleus properties are feasible, and we measure column densities ≈2.5–1600 times higher and intrinsic (unabsorbed) X-ray luminosities ≈10–70 times higher than pre-NuSTAR constraints from Chandra and XMM-Newton. Assuming the NuSTAR-detected type 2 quasars are representative of other Compton-thick candidates, we make a correction to the N_H distribution for optically selected type 2 quasars as measured by Chandra and XMM-Newton for 39 objects. With this approach, we predict a Compton-thick fraction of f_(CT) = 36^(+14)_(-12)%, although higher fractions (up to 76%) are possible if indirect absorption diagnostics are assumed to be reliable.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

NuSTAR Observations of Heavily Obscured Quasars at z ~ 0.5

G. B. Lansbury; D. M. Alexander; A. Del Moro; P. Gandhi; Roberto J. Assef; D. Stern; James Aird; D. R. Ballantyne; M. Baloković; F. E. Bauer; S. E. Boggs; W. N. Brandt; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; M. Elvis; Brian W. Grefenstette; Charles J. Hailey; Fiona A. Harrison; R. C. Hickox; M. Koss; Stephanie M. LaMassa; B. Luo; J. R. Mullaney; Stacy H. Teng; Claudia M. Urry; William W. Zhang

We present NuSTAR hard X-ray observations of three Type 2 quasars at z ≈ 0.4-0.5, optically selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Although the quasars show evidence for being heavily obscured, Compton-thick systems on the basis of the 2-10 keV to [O III] luminosity ratio and multiwavelength diagnostics, their X-ray absorbing column densities (N_H) are poorly known. In this analysis, (1) we study X-ray emission at >10 keV, where X-rays from the central black hole are relatively unabsorbed, in order to better constrain N_H. (2) We further characterize the physical properties of the sources through broad-band near-UV to mid-IR spectral energy distribution analyses. One of the quasars is detected with NuSTAR at >8 keV with a no-source probability of <0.1%, and its X-ray band ratio suggests near Compton-thick absorption with N_H≳5 × 10^(23) cm^(–2). The other two quasars are undetected, and have low X-ray to mid-IR luminosity ratios in both the low-energy (2-10 keV) and high-energy (10-40 keV) X-ray regimes that are consistent with extreme, Compton-thick absorption (N_H≳10^(24) cm^(–2)). We find that for quasars at z ~ 0.5, NuSTAR provides a significant improvement compared to lower energy (<10 keV) Chandra and XMM-Newton observations alone, as higher column densities can now be directly constrained.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

THE VARIABLE HARD X-RAY EMISSION OF NGC 4945 AS OBSERVED BY NUSTAR

S. Puccetti; A. Comastri; F. Fiore; P. Arévalo; G. Risaliti; F. E. Bauer; W. N. Brandt; Daniel Stern; Fiona A. Harrison; D. M. Alexander; Steven E. Boggs; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; P. Gandhi; Charles J. Hailey; M. Koss; G. B. Lansbury; B. Luo; Greg M. Madejski; Giorgio Matt; D. J. Walton; Will Zhang

We present a broadband (~0.5-79 keV) spectral and temporal analysis of multiple NuSTAR observations combined with archival Suzaku and Chandra data of NGC 4945, the brightest extragalactic source at 100 keV. We observe hard X-ray (>10 keV) flux and spectral variability, with flux variations of a factor of two on timescales of 20 ks. A variable primary continuum dominates the high-energy spectrum (>10 keV) in all states, while the reflected/scattered flux that dominates at E <10 keV stays approximately constant. From modeling the complex reflection/transmission spectrum, we derive a Compton depth along the line of sight of τ_(Thomson) ~ 2.9, and a global covering factor for the circumnuclear gas of ~0.15. This agrees with the constraints derived from the high-energy variability, which implies that most of the high-energy flux is transmitted rather than Compton-scattered. This demonstrates the effectiveness of spectral analysis at constraining the geometric properties of the circumnuclear gas, and validates similar methods used for analyzing the spectra of other bright, Compton-thick active galactic nuclei (AGNs). The lower limits on the e-folding energy are between 200 and 300 keV, consistent with previous BeppoSAX, Suzaku, and Swift Burst Alert Telescope observations. The accretion rate, estimated from the X-ray luminosity and assuming a bolometric correction typical of type 2 AGN, is in the range ~0.1-0.3 λ_(Edd) depending on the flux state. The substantial observed X-ray luminosity variability of NGC 4945 implies that large errors can arise from using single-epoch X-ray data to derive L/L_(Edd) values for obscured AGNs.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

A New Population of Compton-thick AGNs Identified Using the Spectral Curvature above 10 keV

M. Koss; Roberto J. Assef; M. Baloković; D. Stern; P. Gandhi; Isabella Lamperti; D. M. Alexander; D. R. Ballantyne; F. E. Bauer; Simon Berney; W. N. Brandt; A. Comastri; N. Gehrels; Fiona A. Harrison; G. B. Lansbury; Craig B. Markwardt; C. Ricci; E. Rivers; Kevin Schawinski; Benny Trakhtenbrot; Ezequiel Treister; C. Megan Urry

We present a new metric that uses the spectral curvature (SC) above 10 keV to identify Compton-thick active galactic nuclei (AGNs) in low-quality Swift/Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) X-ray data. Using NuSTAR, we observe nine high SC-selected AGNs. We find that high-sensitivity spectra show that the majority are Compton-thick (78% or 7/9) and the remaining two are nearly Compton-thick (N_H ≃ (5–8) × 10^(23) cm^(−2)). We find that the SC_(BAT) and SC_(NuSTAR) measurements are consistent, suggesting that this technique can be applied to future telescopes. We tested the SC method on well-known Compton-thick AGNs and found that it is much more effective than broadband ratios (e.g., 100% using SC versus 20% using 8–24 keV/3–8 keV). Our results suggest that using the >10 keV emission may be the only way to identify this population since only two sources show Compton-thick levels of excess in the Balmer decrement corrected [O iii] to observed X-ray emission ratio (F_([O III])/f^(obs)_(2-10 kev) > 1) and WISE colors do not identify most of them as AGNs. Based on this small sample, we find that a higher fraction of these AGNs are in the final merger stage (<10 kpc) than typical BAT AGNs. Additionally, these nine obscured AGNs have, on average, ≈4× higher accretion rates than other BAT-detected AGNs (〈λ_(Edd)〉= 0.068 ± 0.023 compared to 〈λ_(Edd)〉= 0.016 ± 0.004). The robustness of SC at identifying Compton-thick AGNs implies that a higher fraction of nearby AGNs may be Compton-thick (≈22%) and the sum of black hole growth in Compton-thick AGNs (Eddington ratio times population percentage) is nearly as large as mildly obscured and unobscured AGNs.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

NuSTAR J033202-2746.8: Direct Constraints on the Compton Reflection in a Heavily Obscured Quasar at z ≈ 2

A. Del Moro; J. R. Mullaney; D. M. Alexander; A. Comastri; F. E. Bauer; Ezequiel Treister; D. Stern; F. Civano; P. Ranalli; C. Vignali; James Aird; D. R. Ballantyne; M. Baloković; S. E. Boggs; W. N. Brandt; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; P. Gandhi; R. Gilli; Charles J. Hailey; Fiona A. Harrison; R. C. Hickox; Stephanie M. LaMassa; G. B. Lansbury; B. Luo; S. Puccetti; Meg Urry; William W. Zhang

We report Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) observations of NuSTAR J033202-2746.8, a heavily obscured, radio-loud quasar detected in the Extended Chandra Deep Field-South, the deepest layer of the NuSTAR extragalactic survey (~400 ks, at its deepest). NuSTAR J033202-2746.8 is reliably detected by NuSTAR only at E > 8 keV and has a very flat spectral slope in the NuSTAR energy band (Γ = 0.55^(+0.62)_(-0.64); 3-30 keV). Combining the NuSTAR data with extremely deep observations by Chandra and XMM-Newton (4 Ms and 3 Ms, respectively), we constrain the broad-band X-ray spectrum of NuSTAR J033202-2746.8, indicating that this source is a heavily obscured quasar (N_H = 5.6^(+0.9)_(-0.8) x 10^(23) cm^(–2)) with luminosity L_(10-40 keV) ≈6.4 × 10^(44) erg s^(–1). Although existing optical and near-infrared (near-IR) data, as well as follow-up spectroscopy with the Keck and VLT telescopes, failed to provide a secure redshift identification for NuSTAR J033202-2746.8, we reliably constrain the redshift z = 2.00 ± 0.04 from the X-ray spectral features (primarily from the iron K edge). The NuSTAR spectrum shows a significant reflection component (R = 0.55^(0.44)_(-0.37)), which was not constrained by previous analyses of Chandra and XMM-Newton data alone. The measured reflection fraction is higher than the R ~ 0 typically observed in bright radio-loud quasars such as NuSTAR J033202-2746.8, which has L_(1.4 GHz) ≈10^(27) W Hz^(–1). Constraining the spectral shape of active galactic nuclei (AGNs), including bright quasars, is very important for understanding the AGN population, and can have a strong impact on the modeling of the X-ray background. Our results show the importance of NuSTAR in investigating the broad-band spectral properties of quasars out to high redshift.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

NuSTAR Observations of the Compton-thick Active Galactic Nucleus and Ultraluminous X-ray Source Candidate in NGC 5643

A. Annuar; P. Gandhi; D. M. Alexander; G. B. Lansbury; P. Arévalo; D. R. Ballantyne; M. Baloković; F. E. Bauer; S. E. Boggs; W. N. Brandt; M. Brightman; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; A. Del Moro; Charles J. Hailey; Fiona A. Harrison; R. C. Hickox; G. Matt; S. Puccetti; Claudio Ricci; Jane R. Rigby; D. Stern; D. J. Walton; L. Zappacosta; William W. Zhang

We present two NuSTAR observations of the local Seyfert 2 active galactic nucleus (AGN) and an ultraluminous X-ray source (ULX) candidate in NGC 5643. Together with archival data from Chandra, XMM-Newton and Swift-BAT, we perform a high-quality broadband spectral analysis of the AGN over two decades in energy (


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

THE NuSTAR EXTRAGALACTIC SURVEYS: THE NUMBER COUNTS OF ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI AND THE RESOLVED FRACTION OF THE COSMIC X-RAY BACKGROUND

Fiona A. Harrison; James Aird; F. Civano; G. B. Lansbury; J. R. Mullaney; D. R. Ballantyne; D. M. Alexander; D. Stern; M. Ajello; Didier Barret; F. E. Bauer; M. Baloković; W. N. Brandt; M. Brightman; S. E. Boggs; Finn Erland Christensen; A. Comastri; William W. Craig; A. Del Moro; K. Forster; P. Gandhi; Paolo Giommi; Brian W. Grefenstette; Charles J. Hailey; R. C. Hickox; A. Hornstrup; Takao Kitaguchi; Jason E. Koglin; B. Luo; Kristin K. Madsen

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Fiona A. Harrison

California Institute of Technology

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W. N. Brandt

Pennsylvania State University

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P. Gandhi

University of Southampton

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F. E. Bauer

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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D. Stern

California Institute of Technology

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D. R. Ballantyne

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Finn Erland Christensen

Technical University of Denmark

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