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  4. Exploratory X-Ray Monitoring of Luminous Radio-quiet Quasars at High Redshift No Evidence for Evolution in X-Ray Variability
 
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Exploratory X-Ray Monitoring of Luminous Radio-quiet Quasars at High Redshift No Evidence for Evolution in X-Ray Variability

Author(s)
Shemmer, Ohad
Brandt, W. N.
Paolillo, Maurizio
Subjects

galaxies active

quasars individual Q ...

BR 0351--1034

PSS 0926+3055

PSS 1326+0743

X-rays galaxies

Date Issued
2017-10-01
Mission(s)
Other
Abstract
We report on the second installment of an X-ray monitoring project of seven luminous radio-quiet quasars (RQQs). New Chandra observations of four of these, at 4.10<=slant z<=slant 4.35, yield a total of six X-ray epochs per source, with temporal baselines of ˜ 850{--}1600 days in the rest frame. These data provide the best X-ray light curves for RQQs at z> 4 to date, enabling qualitative investigations of the X-ray variability behavior of such sources for the first time. On average, these sources follow the trend of decreasing variability amplitude with increasing luminosity, and there is no evidence for X-ray variability increasing toward higher redshifts, in contrast with earlier predictions of potential evolutionary scenarios. An ensemble variability structure function reveals that their variability level remains relatively flat across ≈ 20{--}1000 days in the rest frame and it is generally lower than that of three similarly luminous RQQs at 1.33<=slant z<=slant 2.74 over the same temporal range. We discuss possible explanations for the increased variability of the lower-redshift subsample and, in particular, whether higher accretion rates play a leading role. Near-simultaneous optical monitoring of the sources at 4.10<=slant z<=slant 4.35 indicates that none is variable on ≈ 1 day timescales, although flux variations of up to ˜25% are observed on ≈ 100 day timescales, typical of RQQs at similar redshifts. Significant optical-X-ray spectral slope variations observed in two of these sources are consistent with the levels observed in luminous RQQs and are dominated by X-ray variations.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13025/5208
DOI
10.3847/1538-4357/aa8b78
URL
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2017ApJ...848...46S
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