A Deep HST H-Band Imaging Survey of Massive Gas-Rich Mergers. II. The QUEST PG QSOs
S. Veilleux, D.-C. Kim, D. S. N. Rupke, C. Y. Peng, L. J. Tacconi, R., Genzel, D. Lutz, E. Sturm, A. Contursi, M. Schweitzer, K. M. Dasyra, L. C., Ho, D. B. Sanders, and A. Burkert

TL;DR
This study uses deep HST imaging to analyze the host galaxies of PG QSOs, revealing insights into their morphology, evolution, and black hole properties, and comparing them with ULIRGs and inactive spheroids.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence on the morphological and evolutionary connection between QSOs, ULIRGs, and spheroids, especially regarding host galaxy properties and black hole masses.
Findings
FIR-faint QSOs tend to have elliptical hosts with fewer merger features.
Host galaxy sizes and luminosities of PG QSOs are similar to ULIRGs, with radio-loud QSOs being larger.
Host deviations from the fundamental plane suggest non-nuclear star formation influence.
Abstract
We report the results from a deep HST NICMOS H-band imaging survey of 28 z < 0.3 QSOs from the Palomar-Green (PG) sample. This program is part of QUEST (Quasar / ULIRG Evolution STudy) and complements a similar set of data on 26 highly-nucleated ULIRGs presented in Paper I. Our analysis indicates that the fraction of QSOs with elliptical hosts is higher among QSOs with undetected far-infrared (FIR) emission, small infrared excess, and luminous hosts. The hosts of FIR-faint QSOs show a tendency to have less pronounced merger-induced morphological anomalies and larger QSO-to-host luminosity ratios on average than the hosts of FIR-bright QSOs, consistent with late-merger evolution from FIR-bright to FIR-faint QSOs. The spheroid sizes and total host luminosities of the radio-quiet PG QSOs in our sample are statistically indistinguishable from the ULIRG hosts presented in Paper I, while…
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