Interferometric imaging of the high-redshift radio galaxy, 4C60.07: An SMA, Spitzer and VLA study reveals a binary AGN/starburst
R.J. Ivison (Edinburgh), G.E. Morrison, A.D. Biggs, Ian Smail, S.P., Willner, M.A. Gurwell, T.R. Greve, J.A. Stevens, M.L.N. Ashby

TL;DR
This study uses interferometric imaging across multiple wavelengths to reveal a likely early-stage galaxy merger involving a high-redshift radio galaxy, uncovering complex submm structures and binary AGN activity.
Contribution
It provides the first high-resolution multi-wavelength imaging evidence of a binary AGN and starburst merger in a high-redshift radio galaxy, highlighting complex gas and dust morphologies.
Findings
Discovery of two dusty components indicating a merger
Identification of a binary AGN/starburst system
Implications for galaxy evolution and black hole co-assembly
Abstract
High-resolution submm imaging of the HzRG, 4C60.07, at z=3.8, has revealed two dusty components. Spitzer imaging shows that one of these components (B) is coincident with an extremely red AGN, offset by ~4" (~30 kpc) from the HzRG core. The other submm component (A) - resolved by our beam and devoid of emission at 3.6-8.0um - lies between B and the HzRG core. Since the HzRG was discovered via its young, steep-spectrum lobes and their creation was likely triggered by the interaction, we argue that we are witnessing an early-stage merger, prior to its eventual equilibrium state. The interaction is between the host galaxy of an actively-fueled BH, and a gas-rich starburst/AGN (B) marked by the compact submm component and coincident with broad CO emission. `A' is a plume of cold, dusty gas, associated with a narrow (~150 km/s) CO feature, and may represent a short-lived tidal structure. It…
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