Star formation in quasar hosts and the origin of radio emission in radio-quiet quasars
Nadia L. Zakamska, Kelly Lampayan, Andreea Petric, Daniel Dicken,, Jenny E. Greene, Timothy M. Heckman, Ryan C. Hickox, Luis C. Ho, Julian H., Krolik, Nicole P.H. Nesvadba, Michael A. Strauss, James E. Geach, Masamune, Oguri, Iskra V. Strateva

TL;DR
This study investigates whether star formation in quasar host galaxies accounts for radio emission in radio-quiet quasars, finding it insufficient and indicating quasar activity dominates observed emissions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis using infrared data to assess star formation rates and their relation to radio emission in radio-quiet quasars, highlighting the dominance of quasar activity.
Findings
Star formation rates are estimated at 6-29 Msun/year.
Star formation cannot account for the observed radio emission.
Quasar activity dominates infrared and radio emissions.
Abstract
Radio emission from radio-quiet quasars may be due to star formation in the quasar host galaxy, to a jet launched by the supermassive black hole, or to relativistic particles accelerated in a wide-angle radiatively-driven outflow. In this paper we examine whether radio emission from radio-quiet quasars is a byproduct of star formation in their hosts. To this end we use infrared spectroscopy and photometry from Spitzer and Herschel to estimate or place upper limits on star formation rates in hosts of ~300 obscured and unobscured quasars at z<1. We find that low-ionization forbidden emission lines such as [NeII] and [NeIII] are likely dominated by quasar ionization and do not provide reliable star formation diagnostics in quasar hosts, while PAH emission features may be suppressed due to the destruction of PAH molecules by the quasar radiation field. While the bolometric luminosities of…
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