A Glimpse at Quasar Host Galaxy Far-UV Emission, Using DLAs as Natural Coronagraphs
Zheng Cai, Xiaohui Fan, Pasquier Noterdaeme, Ran Wang, Ian McGreer,, Bill Carithers, Fuyan Bian, Jordi Miralda Escude, Hayley Finley, Isabelle, Paris, Donald P. Schneider, Nadia L. Zakamska, Jian Ge, Patrick Petitjean,, Anze Slosar

TL;DR
This study uses Damped Lyman Alpha systems as natural coronagraphs to measure the far-UV emission from quasar host galaxies, revealing their star formation activity at high redshift.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method of using DLAs as natural coronagraphs to directly detect and analyze the far-UV emission from quasar host galaxies.
Findings
Detected residual far-UV flux correlated with quasar luminosity
Estimated star formation rate of ~9 solar masses per year in host galaxies
Demonstrated DLAs as effective tools for studying quasar hosts at high redshift
Abstract
In merger-driven models of massive galaxy evolution, the luminous quasar phase is expected to be accompanied by vigorous star formation in quasar host galaxies. In this paper, we use high column density Damped Lyman Alpha (DLA) systems along quasar sight lines as natural coronagraphs to directly study the far-UV (FUV) radiation from the host galaxies of luminous background quasars. We have stacked the spectra of 2,000 DLA systems (N_HI>10^{20.6} cm^{-2}) with a median absorption redshift < z > = 2.6 selected from quasars observed in the SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey. We detect residual flux in the dark troughs of the composite DLA spectra. The level of this residual flux significantly exceeds systematic errors in the SDSS fiber sky subtraction; furthermore, the residual flux is strongly correlated with the continuum luminosity of the background quasar, while…
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