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A SCUBA-2 850$μ$m Survey of Heavily Reddened Quasars at z~2

Published 15 Jan 2020 in astro-ph.GA | (2001.05507v1)

Abstract: We present new 850$\mu$m SCUBA-2 observations for a sample of 19 heavily reddened Type-I quasars at redshifts $z\sim$2 with dust extinctions of A${\rm{V}} \simeq 2-6$ mag. Three of the 19 quasars are detected at $>$3$\sigma$ significance corresponding to an 850$\mu$m flux-limit of $\gtrsim$4.8 mJy. Assuming the 850$\mu$m flux is dominated by dust heating due to star formation, very high star formation rates (SFR) of $\sim$2500-4500 M$\odot$ yr${-1}$ in the quasar host galaxies are inferred. Even when considering a large contribution to the 850$\mu$m flux from dust heated by the quasar itself, significant SFRs of $\sim$600-1500 M$\odot$ yr${-1}$ are nevertheless inferred for two of the three detected quasars. We stack the remaining 16 heavily reddened quasars and derive an average 3$\sigma$ upper limit on the SFRs in these quasar host galaxies of $<$880 M$\odot$ yr${-1}$. The number counts of sub-mm galaxies in the total survey area (134.3arcmin$2$) are consistent with predictions from blank-field surveys. There are, however, individual quasars where we find evidence for an excess of associated sub-mm galaxies. For two quasars, higher spatial resolution and spectroscopic ALMA observations confirm the presence of an excess of sub-mm sources. We compare the 850$\mu$m detection rate of our quasars to both unobscured, ultraviolet luminous quasars as well as the much more obscured population of mid-infrared luminous Hot Dust Obscured Galaxies (HotDOGs). When matched by luminosity and redshift, we find no significant differences in the 850$\mu$m flux densities of these various quasar populations given the current small sample sizes.

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