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A&A 471, 775-786 (2007)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20066708
An XMM-Newton study of hyper-luminous infrared galaxies
A. Ruiz, F. J. Carrera, and F. Panessa0(Received 7 November 2006 / Accepted 18 May 2007)
Abstract
Aims.Hyper-Luminous Infrared Galaxies (HLIRGs) are the most luminous
persistent objects in the Universe. They exhibit extremely high
star formation rates, and most of them seem to harbor an Active
Galactic Nucleus (AGN). They are unique laboratories to
investigate ultimate star formation, and its connection to
super-massive black hole growth. X-ray studies of HLIRGs have the
potential to unravel the AGN contribution to the bolometric output
from these bright objects.
Methods.We have selected a sample of 14 HLIRGs observed by
XMM-Newton (type 1, type 2 AGN and starburst), 5 of which
are candidates to be Compton-thick objects. This is the first time
that a systematic study of this type of objects has been carried
out in the X-ray spectral band. Their X-ray spectral properties
have been correlated with their infrared luminosities, estimated
by IRAS, ISO and sub-millimeter observations.
Results.The X-ray spectra of HLIRGs present heterogeneous properties.
All our X-ray detected HLIRGs (10) have AGN-dominated X-ray
spectra. The hard X-ray luminosity of 8 of them is consistent with
a pure AGN contribution, while in the remaining 2 sources, both an
AGN and a starburst seem to contribute to the overall emission. We
found soft excess emission in 5 sources. In one of them it is
consistent with a pure starburst origin, while in the other 4 sources it is consistent with an AGN origin. The observed X-ray
emission is systematically below that expected for a standard
local QSO of the same IR luminosity, suggesting the possible
presence of absorption in type 2 objects and/or a departure from a
standard spectral energy distribution of QSO. The
X-ray-to-IR-luminosity ratio is constant with redshift, indicating
similar evolutions for the AGN and starburst component, and that
their respective power sources could be physically related.
Key words: galaxies: active -- galaxies: starburst -- galaxies: evolution -- X-rays: galaxies -- infrared: galaxies
© ESO 2007
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