4.7 Article

Host galaxies of high-redshift extremely red and obscured quasars

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 489, Issue 1, Pages 497-516

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stz2071

Keywords

galaxies: active; galaxies: evolution; galaxies: high-redshift; galaxies: interaction; quasars: general

Funding

  1. NASA [NAS 5-26555]
  2. NASA through the STScI [HST-GO-14608, HST-GO-13014]
  3. Catalyst Award at Johns Hopkins University
  4. Deborah Lunder and Alan Ezekowitz Founders' Circle Membership at the Institute for Advanced Study
  5. NASA ADP program
  6. NSF [AST-1516784]
  7. National Thousand Young Talents Program of China
  8. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11673020, 11421303]
  9. Ministry of Science and Technology of China (National Key Program for Science and Technology Research and Development) [2016YFA0400700]
  10. STFC
  11. Ernest Rutherford Fellowship scheme
  12. [GO-14608]
  13. [GO-13014]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We present Hubble Space Telescope 1.4-1.6 mu mimages of the hosts of 10 extremely red quasars (ERQs) and six type 2 quasar candidates at z = 2-3. ERQs, whose bolometric luminosities range between 10(47) and 10(48) erg s(-1), show spectroscopic signs of powerful ionized winds, whereas type 2 quasar candidates are less luminous and show only mild outflows. After performing careful subtraction of the quasar light, we clearly detect almost all host galaxies. The median rest-frame B-band luminosity of the ERQ hosts in our sample is 10(11.2) L-circle dot, or similar to 4L* at this redshift. Two of the 10 hosts of ERQs are in ongoing mergers. The hosts of the type 2 quasar candidates are 0.6 dex less luminous, with 2/6 in likely ongoing mergers. Intriguingly, despite some signs of interaction and presence of low-mass companions, our objects do not show nearly as much major merger activity as do high-redshift radio-loud galaxies and quasars. In the absence of an overt connection to major ongoing gas-rich merger activity, our observations are consistent with a model in which the near-Eddington accretion and strong feedback of ERQs are associated with relatively late stages of mergers resulting in early-type remnants. These results are in some tension with theoretical expectations of galaxy formation models, in which rapid black hole growth occurs within a short time of a major merger. Type 2 quasar candidates are less luminous, so they may instead be powered by internal galactic processes.

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