The molecular gas content in obscured AGN at z > 1
M. Perna, M.T. Sargent, M. Brusa, E. Daddi, C. Feruglio, G. Cresci, G., Lanzuisi, E. Lusso, A. Comastri, R. T. Coogan, Q. D'Amato, R. Gilli, E., Piconcelli, C. Vignali

TL;DR
This study investigates the cold molecular gas content in highly obscured AGN at z > 1 to understand their role in galaxy evolution and black hole growth, finding that obscured AGN have higher star formation efficiency and lower gas fractions compared to normal star-forming galaxies.
Contribution
It provides new CO observations of three obscured QSOs at high redshift and compares their molecular gas properties with other galaxy populations, testing predictions of the SB-QSO evolutionary sequence.
Findings
Obscured AGN at z>1 have higher SFE than star-forming galaxies.
Obscured AGN exhibit lower gas fractions than typical star-forming galaxies.
The SFE of obscured and unobscured AGN are similar, suggesting early feedback effects.
Abstract
The standard AGN-galaxy co-evolutionary scenario predicts a phase of deeply buried supermassive black hole growth coexisting with a starburst (SB) before feedback phenomena deplete the cold molecular gas reservoir of the galaxy and an optically luminous QSO is revealed ('SB-QSO evolutionary sequence'). The aim of this work is to measure the cold gas reservoir of three highly obscured QSOs to test if their gas fraction is similar to that of sub-millimeter galaxies (SMGs), as expected by some models, and place these measurements in the context of the SB-QSO framework. We target CO(1-0) transition in BzK4892, a Compton Thick (CT) QSO at z=2.6, CO(1-0) in BzK8608 and CO(2-1) in CDF153, two highly obscured QSOs at z=2.5 and z=1.5, respectively. For all these targets, we place 3 upper limits on the CO, with K km/s pc. We also compare the…
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