UV-Luminous, Star-Forming Hosts of z~2 Reddened Quasars in the Dark Energy Survey
C. F. Wethers, M. Banerji, P. C. Hewett, C. A. Lemon, R. G. McMahon,, S. L. Reed, Y. Shen, F. B. Abdalla, A. Benoit-L\'evy, D. Brooks, E., Buckley-Geer, D. Capozzi, A. Carnero Rosell, M. CarrascoKind, J. Carretero,, C. E. Cunha, C. B. D'Andrea, L. N. da Costa, D. L. DePoy

TL;DR
This study investigates the host galaxies of heavily reddened, luminous quasars at z~2 using UV observations, revealing active star formation and a correlation with quasar luminosity, indicating concurrent galaxy and black hole growth.
Contribution
First rest-frame UV analysis of heavily reddened, high-luminosity quasars at z~2, demonstrating detectable host galaxy emission and star formation rates via SED fitting.
Findings
Detection of star-forming host galaxies in at least ten quasars.
Derived star formation rates ranging from 25 to 365 solar masses per year.
Evidence of coeval star formation and black hole accretion at z~2.
Abstract
We present the first rest-frame UV population study of 17 heavily reddened, high-luminosity (E(B-V) 0.5; L 10ergs) broad-line quasars at . We combine the first year of deep, optical, ground-based observations from the Dark Energy Survey (DES) with the near infrared VISTA Hemisphere Survey (VHS) and UKIDSS Large Area Survey (ULAS) data, from which the reddened quasars were initially identified. We demonstrate that the significant dust reddening towards the quasar in our sample allows host galaxy emission to be detected at the rest-frame UV wavelengths probed by the DES photometry. By exploiting this reddening effect, we disentangle the quasar emission from that of the host galaxy via spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting. We find evidence for a relatively unobscured, star-forming host galaxy in at least ten quasars, with…
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