The low-metallicity QSO HE 2158-0107: A massive galaxy growing by the accretion of nearly pristine gas from its environment?
B. Husemann (1), L. Wisotzki (1), K. Jahnke (2), S. F. S\'anchez (3), ((1) Leibniz-Institut f\"ur Astrophysik Potsdam, (2) Max-Planck-Institut, f\"ur Astronomie, (3) Centro Astron\'omico Hispano Alem\'an de Calar Alto)

TL;DR
This study presents evidence of a massive galaxy hosting a low-metallicity AGN, likely growing through accretion of pristine gas, challenging typical metallicity and galaxy-BH relation expectations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of a low-metallicity, high-mass AGN with extended emission-line regions, suggesting external gas accretion as a growth mechanism.
Findings
The host galaxy has a stellar mass below the local BH-bulge relation.
The NLR metallicity is sub-solar despite the massive black hole.
Extended emission-line regions indicate infall of pristine gas.
Abstract
[abridged] The metallicities of AGN are usually well above solar in their NLR, often reaching up to several times solar in their broad-line regions. Low-metallicity AGN are rare objects which have so far always been associated with low-mass galaxies hosting low-mass BHs (M_BH<10^6Msun). In this paper we present IFS data of the low-redshift QSO HE 2158-0107 for which we find strong evidence for sub-solar NLR metallicities associated with a massive BH (M_BH~3x10^8Msun). The QSO is surrounded by a large extended emission-line region reaching out to 30kpc from the QSO in a tail-like geometry. We present optical and near-IR images and investigate the properties of the host galaxy. The SED of the host is rather blue, indicative of a significant young age stellar population formed within the last 1Gyr. A 3sigma upper limit of L_bulge<4.5x10^10Lsun for the H band luminosity and a corresponding…
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