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Published September 10, 2014 | Erratum + Published + Submitted
Journal Article Open

NuSTAR Unveils a Compton-thick Type 2 Quasar in Mrk 34

Abstract

We present Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) 3-40 keV observations of the optically selected Type 2 quasar (QSO2) SDSS J1034+6001 or Mrk 34. The high-quality hard X-ray spectrum and archival XMM-Newton data can be fitted self-consistently with a reflection-dominated continuum and a strong Fe Kα fluorescence line with equivalent width >1 keV. Prior X-ray spectral fitting below 10 keV showed the source to be consistent with being obscured by Compton-thin column densities of gas along the line of sight, despite evidence for much higher columns from multiwavelength data. NuSTAR now enables a direct measurement of this column and shows that N H lies in the Compton-thick (CT) regime. The new data also show a high intrinsic 2-10 keV luminosity of L 2-10 ~ 1044 erg s–1, in contrast to previous low-energy X-ray measurements where L 2-10 lsim 1043 erg s–1 (i.e., X-ray selection below 10 keV does not pick up this source as an intrinsically luminous obscured quasar). Both the obscuring column and the intrinsic power are about an order of magnitude (or more) larger than inferred from pre-NuSTAR X-ray spectral fitting. Mrk 34 is thus a "gold standard" CT QSO2 and is the nearest non-merging system in this class, in contrast to the other local CT quasar NGC 6240, which is currently undergoing a major merger coupled with strong star formation. For typical X-ray bolometric correction factors, the accretion luminosity of Mrk 34 is high enough to potentially power the total infrared luminosity. X-ray spectral fitting also shows that thermal emission related to star formation is unlikely to drive the observed bright soft component below ~3 keV, favoring photoionization instead.

Additional Information

Grant and fellowship acknowledgments: STFC ST/J003697/1 (P.G.), ST/K501979/1 (G.B.L.), ST/I001573/1 (D.M.A. and A.D.M.), Leverhulme Trust (D.M.A.), NASA Postdoctoral Program (S.H.T), ASI-INAF grant (A.C.), Anillo ACT1101 and FONDECYT 1140304 (P.A.), International Fulbright Science and Technology Award (M.B.), and Swiss National Science Foundation (NSF) grant PP00P2 138979/1 (M.K.). In addition, F.A.H. acknowledges support from a Durham University COFUND fellowship, and F. E. B. acknowledges support from Basal-CATA PFB-06/2007, CONICYT-Chile (FONDECYT 1141218 and "EMBIGGEN" Anillo ACT1101) Project IC120009 "Millennium Institute of Astrophysics (MAS)" funded by the Iniciativa Cient´ıfica Milenio del Ministerio de Econom´ıa, Fomento y Turismo. The authors thank Fred K.Y. Lo for megamaser discussions, and the referee for the report. P.G. thanks James R. Mullaney and Chris M. Harrison for discussions. P.G. is also grateful to Matteo Guainazzi for his comments and insights on the origin of the soft X-ray spectrum. NuSTAR is a project led by the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), managed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), and funded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The NuSTAR Operations, Software, and Calibration teams are acknowledged for support with these observations. This research has made use of the NuSTAR Data Analysis Software (nustardas) jointly developed by the ASI Science Data Center (ASDC, Italy) and the California Institute of Technology (USA). This work has made use of data from XMM-Newton and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Figure 5 is based upon data from with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope and obtained from the Hubble Legacy Archive. This research has made use of the NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database (NED), which is operated by JPL, Caltech, under contract with NASA. Facilities: NuSTAR, XMM-Newton, Sloan, WISE, HST, Swift, CXO

Attached Files

Published - 0004-637X_792_2_117.pdf

Submitted - 1407.1844v1.pdf

Erratum - 0004-637X_794_2_176.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 17, 2023