Far-infrared and Molecular CO Emission From the Host Galaxies of Faint Quasars at z~6
Ran Wang, Jeff Wagg, Chris L. Carilli, Roberto. Neri, Fabian Walter,, Alain Omont, Dominik. A. Riechers, Frank Bertoldi, Karl M. Menten, Pierre, Cox, Michael A. Strauss, Xiaohui Fan, Linhua Jiang

TL;DR
This study investigates faint z~6 quasars, revealing their host galaxies contain significant dust and molecular gas, indicating active star formation, and shows their FIR emission correlates with bolometric luminosity differently than brighter quasars.
Contribution
It provides new millimeter and radio observations of faint z~6 quasars, demonstrating their host galaxies have substantial dust, molecular gas, and higher star formation rates compared to brighter counterparts.
Findings
Faint z~6 quasars have higher FIR-to-UV luminosity ratios than bright quasars.
Detected molecular CO emission indicates large molecular gas reservoirs.
Star formation rates in host galaxies are estimated at a few hundred solar masses per year.
Abstract
We present new millimeter and radio observations of nine z~6 quasars discovered in deep optical and near-infrared surveys. We observed the 250 GHz continuum in eight of the nine objects and detected three of them. New 1.4 GHz radio continuum data have been obtained for four sources, and one has been detected. We searched for molecular CO (6-5) line emission in the three 250 GHz detections and detected two of them. We study the FIR and radio emission and quasar-host galaxy evolution with a sample of 18 z~6 quasars that are faint at UV/optical wavelengths (rest-frame 1450A magnitudes of m_1450\ge20.2). The average FIR-to-AGN UV luminosity ratio of this faint quasar sample is about two times higher than that of the bright quasars at z~6 (m_1450<20.2). A fit to the average FIR and AGN bolometric luminosities of both the UV/optically faint and bright z~6 quasars, and the average luminosities…
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