Obscured and powerful AGN and starburst activities at z~3.5
M. Polletta, A. Omont, S. Berta, J. Bergeron, C. S. Stalin, P., Petitjean, M. Giorgetti, G. Trinchieri, R. Srianand, H. J. McCracken, Y. Pei,, H. Dannerbauer

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of two highly obscured, luminous AGN-starburst systems at z~3.5, revealing insights into their spectral energy distributions, extreme luminosities, and potential feedback mechanisms affecting galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed analysis of two extremely obscured, luminous AGN-starburst systems at high redshift, combining multi-wavelength data to understand their emission and evolutionary implications.
Findings
Both sources exhibit bolometric luminosities around 10^13 Lsun.
They are the most obscured and luminous millimeter-detected AGNs known.
Evidence suggests AGN-driven radio activity and potential feedback effects.
Abstract
We report the discovery of two sources at z=3.867 and z=3.427 that exhibit powerful starburst and AGN activities. They benefit from data from radio to X rays from the CFHTLS-D1/SWIRE/XMDS surveys. Follow-up optical and near-infrared spectroscopy, and millimeter IRAM/MAMBO observations are also available. We performed an analysis of their spectral energy distributions to understand the origin of their emission and constrain their luminosities. A comparison with other composite systems at similar redshifts from the literature is also presented. The AGN and starburst bolometric luminosities are ~10^13 Lsun. The AGN emission dominates at X ray, optical, mid-infrared wavelengths, and probably in the radio. The starburst emission dominates in the far-infrared. The estimated star formation rates range from 500 to 3000Msun/yr. The AGN near-infrared and X ray emissions are heavily obscured in…
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