The Contribution of Host Galaxies to the Infrared Energy Output of $z\gtrsim5.0$ QUASARS
Jianwei Lyu, G. H. Rieke, Stacey Alberts

TL;DR
This study models the infrared energy output of high-redshift quasars by separating host galaxy and AGN contributions, revealing their star formation rates, stellar masses, and black hole-galaxy mass ratios consistent with local universe relations.
Contribution
Introduces a simple two-template model to disentangle host galaxy and AGN infrared emissions in $z extgreater 5$ quasars, enabling detailed analysis with limited data.
Findings
Host galaxies have high star formation rates (~620 M_sun/yr).
Black hole to galaxy mass ratio aligns with local universe values.
Infrared luminosities follow established quasar correlations.
Abstract
The infrared spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of quasars can be reproduced by combining a low-metallicity galaxy template with a standard AGN template. The host galaxy is represented by Haro 11, a compact, moderately low metallicity, star-bursting galaxy that shares typical features of high- galaxies. For the vast majority of quasars, the AGN contribution is well modeled by a standard empirical template with the contamination of star formation in the infrared subtracted. Together, these two templates can separate the contributions from the host galaxy and the AGN even in the case of limited data points, given that this model has only two free parameters. Using this method, we re-analyze 69 quasars with extensive Herschel observations, and derive their AGN luminosities in a range , the…
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