摘要
Deep X ray surveys have shown that the cosmic X ray background (XRB) is largely due to the accretion onto supermassive black holes, integrated over the cosmic time. These surveys have resolved more than 80% of the 0.1-10keV X ray background into discrete sources. Optical spectroscopic identifications show that the sources producing the bulk of the X ray background are a mixture of obscured (type 1) and unobscured (type 2) AGNs, as predicted by the XRB population synthesis models. A class of highly luminous type 2 AGN, so called QSO 2s, has been detected in the deepest Chandra and XMM Newton surveys. The new Chandra AGN redshift distribution peaks at much lower redshifts (z≈0.7) than that based on ROSAT data, indicating that Seyfert galaxies peak at significantly lower redshifts than QSOs.
Deep X ray surveys have shown that the cosmic X ray background (XRB) is largely due to the accretion onto supermassive black holes, integrated over the cosmic time. These surveys have resolved more than 80% of the 0.1-10keV X ray background into discrete sources. Optical spectroscopic identifications show that the sources producing the bulk of the X ray background are a mixture of obscured (type 1) and unobscured (type 2) AGNs, as predicted by the XRB population synthesis models. A class of highly luminous type 2 AGN, so called QSO 2s, has been detected in the deepest Chandra and XMM Newton surveys. The new Chandra AGN redshift distribution peaks at much lower redshifts (z≈0.7) than that based on ROSAT data, indicating that Seyfert galaxies peak at significantly lower redshifts than QSOs.
出处
《天文研究与技术》
CSCD
北大核心
2003年第S1期136-146,共11页
Astronomical Research & Technology