Resolving the dynamical mass of a z~1.3 QSO host galaxy using SINFONI and Laser Guide Star assisted Adaptive Optics
Katherine J. Inskip, Knud Jahnke, Hans-Walter Rix, Glenn van de Ven

TL;DR
This study measures the dynamical mass of a z~1.3 quasar host galaxy using high-resolution gas kinematics, finding it consistent with local black hole-host galaxy relations and suggesting limited evolution of these relations since that epoch.
Contribution
It introduces a new method for directly measuring host galaxy dynamical mass at high redshift using adaptive optics and gas kinematics, providing insights into black hole-galaxy co-evolution.
Findings
Host galaxy dynamical mass is consistent with local M_BH vs. M_bulge relations.
The galaxy shows signs of tidal interaction and active star formation.
Results support limited evolution of black hole-host galaxy relations since z~1.3.
Abstract
Recent studies of the tight scaling relations between the masses of supermassive black holes and their host galaxies have suggested that in the past black holes constituted a larger fraction of their host galaxies' mass. However, these arguments are limited by selection effects and difficulties in determining robust host galaxy masses at high redshifts. Here we report the first results of a new, complementary diagnostic route: we directly determine a dynamical host galaxy mass for the z=1.3 luminous quasar J090543.56+043347.3 through high-spatial-resolution (0.47", 4kpc FWHM) observations of the host galaxy gas kinematics over 30x40 kpc using ESO/VLT/SINFONI with LGS/AO. Combining our result of M_dyn = 2.05+1.68_0.74 x 10^11 M_sun (within a radius 5.25 +- 1.05 kpc) with M_BH,MgII = 9.02 \pm 1.43 x 10^8 M_sun, M_BH,Halpha = 2.83 +1.93-1.13 x 10^8 M_sun, we find that the ratio of black…
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