The Discovery of Gas-Rich, Dusty Starbursts in Luminous Reddened Quasars at $z\sim2.5$ with ALMA
Manda Banerji (IoA/KICC Cambridge), C. L. Carilli, G. Jones, J. Wagg,, R. G. McMahon, P. C. Hewett, S. Alaghband-Zadeh, C. Feruglio

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA to observe four heavily reddened quasars at z~2.5, revealing they host large gas and dust reservoirs with intense star formation, potentially representing an early galaxy formation phase.
Contribution
First ALMA observations of cold dust and molecular gas in heavily reddened quasars at z~2.5, linking dusty quasars to early massive galaxy formation stages.
Findings
Detected dust and CO emission in all four quasars.
High star formation rates exceeding 1000 solar masses per year.
Resolved molecular gas in one quasar showing a possible rotating disk.
Abstract
We present ALMA observations of cold dust and molecular gas in four high-luminosity, heavily reddened (A mag) Type 1 quasars at with virial MM, to test whether dusty, massive quasars represent the evolutionary link between submillimetre bright galaxies (SMGs) and unobscured quasars. All four quasars are detected in both the dust continuum and in the CO(3-2) line. The mean dust mass is 610M assuming a typical high redshift quasar spectral energy distribution (T=41K, =1.95 or T=47K, =1.6). The implied star formation rates are very high - 1000 M yr in all cases. Gas masses estimated from the CO line luminosities cover 1-5()M and the gas depletion timescales are very short - Myr. A range of…
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