Abstract

Recently, Zakamska et al. selected 291 high-ionization narrow-emission-line active galactic nuclei (AGN) in the redshift range 0.3-0.83 from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) spectroscopic data. The sample includes both type 2 Seyfert galaxies and their higher-luminosity 'cousins', Type II quasar candidates. Here we present the results on the X-ray properties of 17 of these objects for which archival X-ray data (ROSAT and XMM-Newton) are available. Three sources have been significantly (≥6a) detected, one being the most radio-loud source of the sample; its X-ray emission, possibly enhanced by jet emission, is consistent with the absence of absorption. Another source has 6σ detection in the ROSAT All-Sky Survey (RASS), possibly complex radio structure, and no evidence for strong X-ray absorption. For the third X-ray detection, the XMM-Newton spectrum indicates a column density of N H = 1.26 +0.75 -0.51 x 10 22 cm -2 ; this result, coupled with the 2-10 keV luminosity of 4 × 10 44 erg s -1 , makes this source a genuine Type II quasar. Using the [O III] λ5007 line luminosities, we estimated the intrinsic X-ray power of the AGN and found that ≥47 per cent of the observed sample shows indications of X-ray absorption, with column densities ≥10 22 cm -2 . This provides further evidence that a considerable fraction are obscured quasars. Support for our conclusions also comes from the very recent analysis of RASS data performed by Zakamska et al., who found five additional lower-significance (2.1σ-3.6σ) X-ray matches.

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