The reddest ISO-2MASS quasar
C. Leipski (1), M. Haas (2), R. Siebenmorgen (3), H. Meusinger (4), M., Albrecht (5), C. Cesarsky (3), R. Chini (2), R. Cutri (6), H. Drass (2), J., P. Huchra (7), S. Ott (8), B. J. Wilkes (7) ((1) UCSB, CA, USA, (2) AIRUB,, Bochum, Germany, (3) ESO, Garching, Germany, (4) TLS

TL;DR
This study reports on the detailed analysis of the reddest type-1 quasar discovered in a combined NIR/MIR survey, revealing its unique properties and environment, and suggesting intrinsic redness beyond typical quasar spectra.
Contribution
It provides a detailed case study of a uniquely red type-1 quasar, including multi-wavelength observations and analysis, highlighting its distinct characteristics and environment compared to standard quasars.
Findings
The quasar exhibits significant reddening due to hot nuclear dust.
It is embedded in a star-forming galaxy with a close companion.
The quasar's continuum is intrinsically redder than typical quasars.
Abstract
In the course of the NIR/MIR AGN search combining the 6.7 mu ISOCAM Parallel Survey and 2MASS we have discovered 24 type-1 quasars about a third of which are too red to be discriminated by optical/UV search techniques. Here we report on a detailed case study of the reddest type-1 quasar of our sample (J2341) at redshift z=0.236 with M_K=-25.8 and J-K=1.95. We performed spectroscopy in the optical with VLT/FORS1 and in the MIR with Spitzer as well as NIR imaging with ISPI at CTIO. The optical and NIR observations reveal a star forming emission-line galaxy at the same redshift as the quasar with a projected linear separation of 1.8 arcsec (6.7 kpc). The quasar and its companion are embedded in diffuse extended continuum emission. Compared with its companion the quasar exhibits redder optical-NIR colours, which we attribute to hot nuclear dust. The MIR spectrum shows only few emission…
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