Herschel ATLAS: The cosmic star formation history of quasar host galaxies
S. Serjeant, F. Bertoldi, A.W. Blain, D.L. Clements, A. Cooray, L., Danese, J. Dunlop, L. Dunne, S. Eales, J. Falder, E. Hatziminaoglou, D.H., Hughes, E. Ibar, M.J. Jarvis, A. Lawrence, M.G. Lee, M. Micha{\l}owski, M., Negrello, A. Omont, M. Page, C. Pearson, P.P. van der Werf

TL;DR
This study analyzes the star formation history of quasar host galaxies across a wide redshift range using far-infrared data, revealing downsizing and different evolutionary patterns based on quasar luminosity.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale statistical analysis of star formation rates in quasar hosts from z=0 to 6, highlighting luminosity-dependent evolution and downsizing.
Findings
Low-luminosity quasars peak in star formation at z~1-2.
High-luminosity quasars peak at z~3.
Star formation rate evolution varies with quasar luminosity.
Abstract
We present a derivation of the star formation rate per comoving volume of quasar host galaxies, derived from stacking analyses of far-infrared to mm-wave photometry of quasars with redshifts 0<z<6 and absolute I-band magnitudes -22>I_AB>-32. We use the science demonstration observations of the first ~16 deg^2 from the Herschel Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey (H-ATLAS) in which there are 240 quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and a further 171 from the 2dF-SDSS LRG and QSO (2SLAQ) survey. We supplement this data with a compilation of data from IRAS, ISO, Spitzer, SCUBA and MAMBO. H-ATLAS alone statistically detects the quasars in its survey area at >5sigma at 250, 350 and 500um. From the compilation as a whole we find striking evidence of downsizing in quasar host galaxy formation: low-luminosity quasars with absolute magnitudes in the range -22>I_AB>-24 have a…
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