The origin of the Far-infrared continuum of z ~ 6 quasars: a radiative transfer model for SDSS J1148+5251
Raffaella Schneider (1), Simone Bianchi (2), Rosa Valiante (1), Guido, Risaliti (2), Stefania Salvadori (3) ((1) INAF/Osservatorio Astronomico di, Roma (2) INAF/Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri (3) Kapteyn Astronomical, Institute)

TL;DR
This study models the far-infrared emission of a high-redshift quasar, revealing that both the central black hole and intense star formation significantly contribute to dust heating, indicating co-evolution of black holes and galaxies.
Contribution
It introduces a radiative transfer model combined with galaxy evolution simulations to quantify dust heating sources in high-z quasars, a novel approach for this context.
Findings
Central source heats 30-70% of FIR emission.
Star formation rate of ~900 Msun/yr needed for observed FIR.
Black hole and galaxy co-evolve during early growth phases.
Abstract
We investigate the origin of the FIR continuum of SDSS J1148+5251, using it as a prototype for the more general class of high-luminosity high-redshift QSOs. We run the radiative transfer code TRADING to follow the transfer of radiation from the central source and from stellar sources through the dusty environment of the host galaxy. The model is based on the output of the semi-analytical merger tree code, GAMETE/QSOdust, which enables to predict the evolution of the host galaxy and of its nuclear black hole, following the star formation history and chemical evolution -- including dust -- in all the progenitor galaxies of SDSS J1148+5251. We find that the radiation emitted by the central source can also provide an important source of heating for the dust distributed in the host galaxy, powering at least 30% and up to 70% of the observed far infrared emission at rest-frame wavelengths [20…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
