ALMA Observations Show Major Mergers Among the Host Galaxies of Fast-growing, High-redshift Supermassive Black Holes
Benny Trakhtenbrot, Paulina Lira, Hagai Netzer, Claudia Cicone,, Roberto Maiolino, Ohad Shemmer

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations of high-redshift quasars to reveal that major galaxy mergers significantly contribute to rapid supermassive black hole growth, but other mechanisms may also be involved.
Contribution
First ALMA imaging of six high-redshift quasars shows diverse host galaxy properties and evidence of major mergers influencing SMBH growth.
Findings
Major mergers are common among the quasar hosts.
Some quasars have interacting companion galaxies within 45 kpc.
Gas kinematics suggest multiple fueling mechanisms for SMBH growth.
Abstract
We present new ALMA band-7 data for a sample of six luminous quasars at z~4.8, powered by fast-growing supermassive black holes (SMBHs) with rather uniform properties: the typical accretion rates and black hole masses are L/L_Edd~0.7 and M_BH~10^9 M_sol. Our sample consists of three "FIR-bright" sources, which were individually detected in previous Herschel/SPIRE observations, with star formation rates of SFR>1000 M_sol/yr, and three "FIR-faint" sources for which Herschel stacking analysis implies a typical SFR of ~400 M_sol/yr. The dusty interstellar medium in the hosts of all six quasars is clearly detected in the ALMA data and resolved on scales of ~2 kpc, in both continuum (\lambda_rest ~150 um) and [C II]157.74 um line emission. The continuum emission is in good agreement with the expectations from the Herschel data, confirming the intense SF activity in the quasar hosts.…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
