Subaru High-z Exploration of Low-Luminosity Quasars (SHELLQs) III. Star formation properties of the host galaxies at $z \gtrsim 6$ studied with ALMA
Takuma Izumi, Masafusa Onoue, Hikari Shirakata, Tohru Nagao, Kotaro, Kohno, Yoshiki Matsuoka, Masatoshi Imanishi, Michael A. Strauss, Nobunari, Kashikawa, Andreas Shulze, John D. Silverman, Seiji Fujimoto, Yuichi, Harikane, Yoshiki Toba, Hideki Umehata, Kouichiro Nakanishi

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to analyze the star formation and host galaxy properties of low-luminosity quasars at redshift around 6, revealing they are likely transitioning into quiescent galaxies with black hole-host mass ratios similar to local values.
Contribution
First detailed ALMA measurements of [CII] and FIR emissions from low-luminosity quasars at z > 6, showing their host galaxies are less active and possibly evolving into quiescent galaxies.
Findings
Low-luminosity quasar hosts have smaller [CII] and FIR luminosities than luminous quasars.
Their star formation rates are approximately 23-40 solar masses per year.
Black hole to host galaxy mass ratios align with local universe values.
Abstract
We present our ALMA Cycle 4 measurements of the [CII] emission line and the underlying far-infrared (FIR) continuum emission from four optically low-luminosity () quasars at discovered by the Subaru Hyper Suprime Cam (HSC) survey. The [CII] line and FIR continuum luminosities lie in the ranges and , which are at least one order of magnitude smaller than those of optically-luminous quasars at . We estimate the star formation rates (SFR) of our targets as . Their line and continuum-emitting regions are marginally resolved, and found to be comparable in size to those of optically luminous quasars, indicating that their SFR or likely gas mass surface densities (key controlling parameter of mass accretion) are…
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.
