Thermal Emission from Warm Dust in the Most Distant Quasars
R. Wang, C. L. Carilli, J. Wagg, F. Bertoldi, F. Walter, K. M. Menten,, A. Omont, P. Cox, M. A. Strauss, X. Fan, L. Jiang, D. P. Schneider

TL;DR
This study investigates the far-infrared properties of the most distant quasars at z~6, revealing significant star formation activity in some hosts through millimeter and radio observations, and comparing their emission characteristics to lower-redshift quasars.
Contribution
It provides new millimeter and radio observations of z~6 quasars, analyzes their FIR emission, and assesses star formation rates, offering insights into early galaxy evolution and quasar host properties.
Findings
Approximately 30% of quasars detected at 250 GHz.
Detected sources show FIR excesses consistent with star-forming galaxies.
Star formation rates in detected hosts likely exceed 10^3 solar masses per year.
Abstract
We report new continuum observations of fourteen z~6 quasars at 250 GHz and fourteen quasars at 1.4 GHz. We summarize all recent millimeter and radio observations of the sample of the thirty-three quasars known with 5.71<=z<=6.43, and present a study of the rest frame far-infrared (FIR) properties of this sample. These quasars were observed with the Max Plank Millimeter Bolometer Array (MAMBO) at 250 GHz with mJy sensitivity, and 30% of them were detected. We also recover the average 250 GHz flux density of the MAMBO undetected sources at 4 sigma, by stacking the on-source measurements. The derived mean radio-to-UV spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of the full sample and the 250 GHz non-detections show no significant difference from that of lower-redshift optical quasars. Obvious FIR excesses are seen in the individual SEDs of the strong 250 GHz detections, with FIR-to-radio emission…
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