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Black hole accretion and host galaxies of obscured quasars in XMM-COSMOS

Mainieri, V. and Bongiorno, A. and Merloni, A. and Aller, M. and Carollo, M. and Iwasawa, K. and Koekemoer, A.~M. and Mignoli, M. and Silverman, J.~D.

Keywords

quasars: general, galaxies: active, galaxies: nuclei, X-rays: general, galaxies: star formation

Abstract

We explore the connection between black hole growth at the center of obscured quasars selected from the XMM-COSMOS survey and the physical properties of their host galaxies. We study a bolometric regime ( 8 x 10^45 erg/s) where several theoretical models invoke major galaxy mergers as the main fueling channel for black hole accretion. We confirm that obscured quasars mainly reside in massive galaxies (Mstar>10^10 Msun) and that the fraction of galaxies hosting such powerful quasars monotonically increases with the stellar mass. We stress the limitation of the use of rest-frame color-magnitude diagrams as a diagnostic tool for studying galaxy evolution and inferring the influence that AGN activity can have on such a process. We instead use the correlation between star-formation rate and stellar mass found for star-forming galaxies to discuss the physical properties of the hosts. We find that at z ~1, ~62% of Type-2 QSOs hosts are actively forming stars and that their rates are comparable to those measured for normal star-forming galaxies. The fraction of star-forming hosts increases with redshift: ~71% at z ~2, and 100% at z ~3. We also find that the the evolution from z ~1 to z ~3 of the specific star-formation rate of the Type-2 QSO hosts is in excellent agreement with that measured for star-forming galaxies. From the morphological analysis, we conclude that most of the objects are bulge-dominated galaxies, and that only a few of them exhibit signs of recent mergers or disks. Finally, bulge-dominated galaxies tend to host Type-2 QSOs with low Eddington ratios (lambda 0.1).

Information

Published
2011 as article
ap, 535 - page(s): A80
Contact
Dr. Mara Salvato
Type
experimental work
Links
pdf
ads
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Related to the research area(s):
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e-Print
1105.5395

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