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      Spectrum of the unresolved cosmic X ray background: what is unresolved 50 years after its discovery

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          Abstract

          We study the spectral properties of the unresolved cosmic X-ray background (CXRB) in the 1.5-7.0 keV energy band with the aim of providing an observational constraint on the statistical properties of those sources that are too faint to be individually probed. We made use of the Swift X-ray observation of the Chandra Deep Field South complemented by the Chandra data. Exploiting the lowest instrument background (Swift) together with the deepest observation ever performed (Chandra) we measured the unresolved emission at the deepest level and with the best accuracy available today. We find that the unresolved CXRB emission can be modeled by a single power law with a very hard photon index Gamma=0.1+/-0.7 and a flux of 5(+/-3)E-12 cgs in the 2.0-10 keV energy band (1 sigma error). Thanks to the low instrument background of the Swift-XRT, we significantly improved the accuracy with respect to previous measurements. These results point towards a novel ingredient in AGN population synthesis models, namely a positive evolution of the Compton-thick AGN population from local Universe to high redshift.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          23 October 2012
          Article
          10.1051/0004-6361/201219921
          1210.6377
          e83c7d3a-a515-4517-9191-ce4670d72f52

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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          Custom metadata
          11 pages 12 figures; A&A in press
          astro-ph.CO

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