# On the discovery of fast molecular gas in the UFO/BAL quasar APM   08279+5255 at z=3.912

**Authors:** C. Feruglio, A. Ferrara, M. Bischetti, D. Downes, R. Neri, C., Ceccarelli, C. Cicone, F. Fiore, S. Gallerani, R. Maiolino, N. Menci, E., Piconcelli, G. Vietri, C. Vignali, L. Zappacosta

arXiv: 1706.05527 · 2017-12-06

## TL;DR

This study reports the first detection of fast molecular gas in a high-redshift quasar, revealing insights into quasar-driven outflows and their potential impact on galaxy evolution.

## Contribution

It presents the first observation of fast molecular gas in a z>3 quasar and discusses its implications for outflow mechanisms and galaxy feedback processes.

## Key findings

- Detection of blueshifted CO(4-3) with velocities up to -1340 km/s.
- Derived molecular outflow mass flow rate of 3-7.4 x 10^3 M_sun/yr.
-  Tentative identification of N2H+ emission at high redshift.

## Abstract

We have performed a high sensitivity observation of the UFO/BAL quasar APM 08279+5255 at z=3.912 with NOEMA at 3.2 mm, aimed at detecting fast moving molecular gas. We report the detection of blueshifted CO(4-3) with maximum velocity (v95\%) of $-1340$ km s$^{-1}$, with respect to the systemic peak emission, and a luminosity of $L' = 9.9\times 10^9 ~\mu^{-1}$ K km s$^{-1}$ pc$^{-2}$ (where $\mu$ is the lensing magnification factor). We discuss various scenarios for the nature of this emission, and conclude that this is the first detection of fast molecular gas at redshift $>3$. We derive a mass flow rate of molecular gas in the range $\rm \dot M=3-7.4\times 10^3$ M$_\odot$/yr, and momentum boost $\dot P_{OF} / \dot P_{AGN} \sim 2-6$, therefore consistent with a momentum conserving flow. For the largest $\dot P_{OF}$ the scaling is also consistent with a energy conserving flow with an efficiency of $\sim$10-20\%. The present data can hardly discriminate between the two expansion modes. The mass loading factor of the molecular outflow $\eta=\dot M_{OF}/SFR$ is $>>1$. We also detect a molecular emission line at a frequency of 94.83 GHz, corresponding to a rest frame frequency of 465.8 GHz, which we tentatively identified with the cation molecule $\rm N_2H^+$(5-4), which would be the first detection of this species at high redshift. We discuss the alternative possibility that this emission is due to a CO emission line from the, so far undetected, lens galaxy. Further observations of additional transitions of the same species with NOEMA can discriminate between the two scenarios.

## Full text

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## Figures

16 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.05527/full.md

## References

41 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.05527/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.05527