4.7 Article

Evidence for merger remnants in early-type host galaxies of low-redshift QSOs

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 677, Issue 2, Pages 846-857

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/529068

Keywords

galaxies : active; galaxies : evolution; galaxies : interactions; quasars : general

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We present results from a pilot HSTACS deep imaging study in broadband V of five low- redshift QSO host galaxies classified in the literature as ellipticals. The aim of our study is to determine whether these early- type hosts formed at high redshift and have since evolved passively, or whether they have undergone relatively recent mergers that may be related to the triggering of the nuclear activity. We perform two- dimensional modeling of the light distributions to analyze the host galaxies' morphology. We find that, while each host galaxy is reasonably well fitted by a de Vaucouleurs profile, the majority of them ( 4/ 5) reveal significant fine structure such as shells and tidal tails. These structures contribute between similar to 5% and 10% to the total V- band luminosity of each host galaxy within a region of r similar to 3r(eff) and are indicative of merger events that occurred between a few hundred Myr and a Gyrago. These timescales are comparable to starburst ages in the QSO hosts previously inferred from Keck spectroscopy. Our results thus support a consistent scenario in which most of the QSO host galaxies suffered mergers with accompanying starbursts that likely also triggered the QSO activity in some way, but we are also left with considerable uncertainty on physical mechanisms that might have delayed this triggering for several hundred Myr after the merger.

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