PKS 0537−286
PKS 0537−286, also known as QSO B0537−286, is a quasar located in the constellation Columba. With a redshift of 3.104, the object is located 11.4 billion light years away and belongs to the flat-spectrum radio quasar blazar subclass. It is one of the most luminous known high-redshift quasars.
Observation history
First detected at radio frequencies in 1975, PKS 0537−286 was observed at X-rays by the Einstein observatory. It was later studied by ASCA, ROSAT, XMM and subsequently Swift. These observations showed PKS 0537−286 as extremely luminous quasar with a particularly hard spectrum, which in the γ-ray band, it shows an energy flux of × 10−11 erg cm−2 s−1 in the fourth catalogue of Fermi-''LAT active galactic nuclei. A weak iron K'' emission line and reflection features is also found in PKS 0537−286. Moreover, Sowards-Emmerd et al. identified the quasar as probable counterpart of the EGRET source 3EG J0531−2940.Characteristics
PKS 0537−286 is the brightest blazar beyond z = 3.0. It shows characteristic properties of blazars, such as which are widely attributed to a powerful relativistic jet oriented close to the line of sight.Moreover, in several occasions, γ-ray flares were observed when the daily flux was above 10−6 photon cm−2 s−1. This makes PKS 0537−286 the most distant γ-ray flaring blazar. The broad-band emission from PKS 0537−286 was successfully modelled within a one-zone synchrotron and external inverse Compton scenario where the excess in optical and ultraviolet bands was interpreted as emission from bright thermal accretion disc. Moreover, PKS 0537−286 shows an emission redshift of 3.11, a prominent absorption system at a redshift of 2.976, and a strong discontinuity at the Lyman-continuum edge in the absorption system.