Half of the Most Luminous Quasars May Be Obscured: Investigating the Nature of WISE-Selected Hot, Dust-Obscured Galaxies
Roberto J. Assef, Peter R.M. Eisenhardt, Daniel Stern, Chao-Wei Tsai,, Jingwen Wu, Dominika Wylezalek, Andrew W. Blain, Carrie R. Bridge, Emilio, Donoso, Alexandria Gonzales, Roger L. Griffith, Thomas H. Jarrett

TL;DR
This paper investigates the nature of Hot Dust-Obscured Galaxies (Hot DOGs), revealing they are highly luminous, often obscured AGNs with significant implications for galaxy evolution and the obscured quasar population.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of Hot DOGs' spectral energy distributions, suggesting they are a distinct, luminous, obscured AGN population possibly representing a new galaxy evolution phase.
Findings
Hot DOGs have SEDs dominated by obscured AGN emission.
Their number density is comparable to luminous unobscured QSOs.
Hot DOGs may be a different galaxy population, not just obscured counterparts.
Abstract
The WISE mission has unveiled a rare population of high-redshift (), dusty, hyper-luminous galaxies, with infrared luminosities , and sometimes exceeding . Previous work has shown that their dust temperatures and overall far-IR SEDs are significantly hotter than expected for star-formation. We present here an analysis of the rest-frame optical through mid-IR SEDs for a large sample of these so-called "Hot, Dust-Obscured Galaxies" (Hot DOGs). We find that the SEDs of Hot DOGs are generally well modeled by the combination of a luminous, yet obscured AGN that dominates the rest-frame emission at and the bolometric luminosity output, and a less luminous host galaxy that is responsible for the bulk of the rest optical/UV emission. Even though the stellar mass of the host galaxies may be as large as…
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