ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Deep Observations of CO and Free-Free Emission in Ultraluminous Infrared QSO IRAS F07599+6508

77   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Qinghua Tan
 تاريخ النشر 2021
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English
 تأليف Qing-Hua Tan




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

Infrared quasi-stellar objects (IR QSOs) are a rare subpopulation selected from ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) and have been regarded as promising candidates of ULIRG-to-optical QSO transition objects. Here we present NOEMA observations of the CO(1-0) line and 3 mm continuum emission in an IR QSO IRAS F07599+6508 at $z=0.1486$, which has many properties in common with Mrk 231. The CO emission is found to be resolved with a major axis of $sim$6.1 kpc that is larger than the size of $sim$4.0 kpc derived for 3 mm continuum. We identify two faint CO features located at a projected distance of $sim$11.4 and 19.1 kpc from the galaxy nucleus, respectively, both of which are found to have counterparts in the optical and radio bands and may have a merger origin. A systematic velocity gradient is found in the CO main component, suggesting that the bulk of molecular gas is likely rotationally supported. Based on the radio-to-millimeter spectral energy distribution and IR data, we estimate that about 30$%$ of the flux at 3 mm arises from free-free emission and infer a free-free-derived star formation rate of 77 $M_odot {rm yr^{-1}}$, close to the IR estimate corrected for the AGN contribution. We find a high-velocity CO emission feature at the velocity range of about -1300 to -2000 km s$^{-1}$. Additional deep CO observations are needed to confirm the presence of a possible very high-velocity CO extension of the OH outflow in this IR QSO.

قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

The high-frequency radio sky has historically remained largely unexplored due to the typical faintness of sources in this regime, and the modest survey speed compared to observations at lower frequencies. However, high-frequency radio surveys present an invaluable tracer of high-redshift star-formation, as they directly target the faint radio free-free emission. We present deep continuum observations at 34 GHz in the COSMOS and GOODS-North fields from the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA), as part of the COLDz survey. The deep COSMOS mosaic spans $sim10text{arcmin}^2$ down to $sigma=1.3mutext{Jy beam}^{-1}$, while the wider GOODS-N observations cover $sim50text{arcmin}^2$ to $sigma=5.3mutext{Jy beam}^{-1}$. We present the deepest 34 GHz radio number counts to date, with five and thirteen continuum detections in COSMOS and GOODS-N, respectively. Nine galaxies show 34 GHz continuum emission that is originating from star-formation, although for two sources this is likely due to thermal emission from dust. Utilizing deep ancillary radio data at 1.4, 3, 5 and 10 GHz, we decompose the spectra of the remaining seven star-forming galaxies into their synchrotron and thermal free-free components, finding typical thermal fractions and synchrotron spectral indices comparable to those observed in local star-forming galaxies. Using calibrations from the literature, we determine free-free star-formation rates (SFRs), and show that these are in agreement with SFRs from spectral energy distribution fitting and the far-infrared/radio correlation. Our observations place strong direct constraints on the high-frequency radio emission in typical galaxies at high-redshift, and provide some of the first insight in what is set to become a key area of study with future radio facilities as the Square Kilometer Array Phase 1 and next-generation VLA.
One of the puzzles in understanding the spectra of active galactic nuclei (AGN) is the origin of the FeII emission. FeI emission, if present, will help reveal the physical conditions of the emitting gas. In an attempt to verify the presence of FeI li nes, high S/N spectra of two FeII-strong quasars, IRAS 07598-6508 and PHL 1092, were obtained at the Multiple Mirror Telescope and the Steward 2.3 m Telescope. We have identified emission lines of FeI and TiII. The source of energy for FeII, FeI and TiII emission is probably not from ionization by the photon continuum, but heat. The high rate of energy generation and the presence of both high and low velocity gas indicate that the heat is generated not over a large area, but a narrow band in accretion disk, in which the rotational speed decreases rapidly.
We describe radio observations at 244 and 610 MHz of a sample of 20 luminous and ultra-luminous IRAS galaxies. These are a sub-set of a sample of 31 objects that have well-measured radio spectra up to at least 23 GHz. The radio spectra of these objec ts below 1.4 GHz show a great variety of forms and are rarely a simple power-law extrapolation of the synchrotron spectra at higher frequencies. Most objects of this class have spectral turn-overs or bends in their radio spectra. We interpret these spectra in terms of free-free absorption in the starburst environment. Several objects show radio spectra with two components having free-free turn-overs at different frequencies (including Arp 220 and Arp 299), indicating that synchrotron emission originates from regions with very different emission measures. In these sources, using a simple model for the supernova rate, we estimate the time for which synchrotron emission is subject to strong free-free absorption by ionized gas, and compare this to expected HII region lifetimes. We find that the ionized gas lifetimes are an order of magnitude larger than plausible lifetimes for individual HII regions. We discuss the implications of this result and argue that those sources which have a significant radio component with strong free-free absorption are those in which the star formation rate is still increasing with time. We note that if ionization losses modify the intrinsic synchrotron spectrum so that it steepens toward higher frequencies, the often observed deficit in fluxes higher than ~10 GHz would be much reduced.
62 - Qing-Hua Tan 2019
We present ALMA observations of the CO(1-0) line and 3-mm continuum emission in eight ultraluminous infrared (IR) quasi-stellar objects (QSOs) at z = 0.06-0.19. All eight IR QSO hosts are clearly resolved in their CO molecular gas emission with a med ian source size of 3.2 kpc, and seven out of eight sources are detected in 3-mm continuum, which is found to be more centrally concentrated with respect to molecular gas with sizes of 0.4-1.0 kpc. Our observations reveal a diversity of CO morphology and kinematics for the IR QSO systems which can be roughly classified into three categories, rotating gas disk with ordered velocity gradient, compact CO peak with disturbed velocity, and multiple CO distinct sources undergoing a merger between luminous QSO and a companion galaxy separated by a few kpc. The molecular gas in three of IR QSO hosts are found to be rotation-dominated with the ratio of the maximum rotation velocity to the local velocity dispersion of $V_{rm rot}/sigma=4-6$. Basic estimates of the dynamical masses within the CO-emitting regions give masses between $7.4times10^9$ and $6.9times10^{10}$ $M_odot$. We find an increasing trend between BH mass accretion rate and star formation rate (SFR) over three orders of magnitude in far-IR luminosity/SFR, in line with the correlation between QSO bolometric luminosity and SF activity, indicative of a likely direct connection between AGN and SF activity over galaxy evolution timescales.
77 - S. Veilleux , 2001
For the past several years, our group has pursued a vigorous ground-based program aimed at understanding the nature of ultraluminous infrared galaxies. We recently published the results from a optical/near-infrared spectroscopic survey of a large sta tistically complete sample of ultraluminous infrared galaxies (the IRAS 1-Jy sample). We now present the results from our recently completed optical/near-infrared imaging survey of the 1-Jy sample. These data provide detailed morphological information on both large scale (e.g., intensity and color profiles, intensity and size of tidal tails and bridges, etc) and small scale (e.g., nuclear separation, presence of bars, etc) that helps us constrain the initial conditions necessary to produce galaxies with such high level of star formation and/or AGN activity. The nature of the interdependence between some key spectroscopic and morphological parameters in our objects (e.g., dominant energy source: super-starburst versus quasar, nuclear separation, merger phase, star formation rate, and infrared luminosity and color) is used to clarify the connection between starbursts, ultraluminous infrared galaxies, and quasars.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا