We explore the nature of Infrared Excess sources (IRX), which are proposed as
candidates for luminous L_X(2-10keV)>1e43erg/s Compton Thick (N_H>2e24cm^{-2})QSOsatz2.Lowerredshift,z1,analoguesofthedistantIRXpopulationareidentifiedbyfirstlyredshiftingtoz=2theSEDsofallsourceswithsecurespectroscopicredshiftsintheAEGIS(6488)andtheGOODS−North(1784)surveysandthenselectingthosethatqualifyasIRXsourcesatthatredshift.Atotalof19galaxiesareselected.Themeanredshiftofthesampleisz\approx1.WedonotfindstrongevidenceforComptonThickQSOsinthesample.For9sourceswithX−raycounterparts,theX−rayspectraareconsistentwithComptonThinAGN.Only3ofthemshowtentativeevidenceforComptonThickobscuration.TheSEDsoftheX−rayundetectedpopulationareconsistentwithstarburstactivity.Thereisnoevidenceforahotdustcomponentatthemid−infraredassociatedwithAGNheateddust.IftheX−rayundetectedsourceshostAGN,anupperlimitofLX(2−10keV)=1e43erg/sisestimatedfortheirintrinsicluminosity.Weproposethatalargefractionofthez\approx2$ IRX population are not Compton
Thick QSOs but low luminosity [L_X(2-10keV)<1e43erg/s], possibly Compton Thin,
AGN or dusty starbursts. It is shown that the decomposition of the AGN and
starburst contribution to the mid-IR is essential for interpreting the nature
of this population, as star-formation may dominate this wavelength regime.Comment: Accepted by MNRA