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Remarkably high mass and high velocity dispersion of molecular gas associated with a regular, absorption-selected type-I quasar

Published 17 Mar 2021 in astro-ph.GA | (2103.09542v2)

Abstract: We present 3-mm observations of the quasar J0015+1842 at z=2.63 with the NOrthern Extended Millimeter Array (NOEMA). Our data reveals molecular gas, traced via a Gaussian CO(3-2) line, with a remarkably large velocity dispersion (FWHM=1010+/-120 km/s) and corresponding to a total molecular mass MH2~(3.4-17)x1010 Msun, depending on the adopted CO-to-H2 conversion factor alphaCO=(0.8-4.0) Msun (km/s pc2)-1. Assuming the 3-mm continuum emission is thermal, we derive a dust mass of the order of Mdust ~5x108 Msun. J0015+1842 is located in the molecular gas-rich region in the IR vs CO line luminosity diagram, in-between the main locus of main-sequence and sub-millimetre galaxies and that of most other AGNs targeted so far for CO measurements. While the large velocity dispersion of the CO line suggests a merging system, J0015+1842 is observed to be a regular, only very moderately dust-reddened (Av~0.3-0.4) type-I quasar from its UV-optical spectrum, from which we infer a mass of the super-massive black hole be around MBH~6x108 Msun. We suggest that J0015+1842 is observed at a galaxy evolutionary stage where a massive merger has brought significant amounts of gas towards an actively accreting super-massive black hole (quasar). While the host still contains a large amount of dust and molecular gas with high velocity dispersion, the quasar has already cleared the way towards the observer, likely through powerful outflows as recently revealed by optical observations of the same object. High angular resolution observations of this and similar systems} should help determining better the respective importance of evolution and orientation in the appearance of quasars and their host galaxies and have the potential to investigate early feedback and star-formation processes in galaxies in their quasar phases.

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