On the multiplicity of ALMA Compact Array counterparts of far-infrared bright quasars
E. Hatziminaoglou, D. Farrah, E. Humphreys, A. Manrique, I., Perez-Fournon, L. K. Pitchford, E. Salvador-Sole, L. Wang

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA ACA 870 micron maps to investigate the number of counterparts of FIR-bright quasars, finding most are single sources, which impacts understanding of their formation and evolution.
Contribution
It provides the largest ALMA ACA sample of FIR-bright quasars and analyzes their multiplicity, challenging previous assumptions about merger-driven star formation.
Findings
70% of quasars have unique ACA counterparts
30% show multiple sources contributing significantly
Most FIR emission originates from single sources
Abstract
We present ALMA Atacama Compact Array (ACA) 870 micron continuum maps of 28 infrared-bright SDSS quasars with Herschel/SPIRE detections at redshifts 2-4, the largest such sample ever observed with ALMA. The ACA detections are centred on the SDSS coordinates to within 1 arcsec for about 80 per cent of the sample. Larger offsets indicate that the far-infrared (FIR) emission detected by Herschel might come from a companion source. The majority of the objects (about 70 per cent) have unique ACA counterparts within the SPIRE beam down to 3-4 arcsec resolution. Only 30 per cent of the sample shows clear evidence for multiple sources with secondary counterparts contributing to the total 870 micron flux within the SPIRE beam to at least 25 per cent. We discuss the limitations of the data based on simulated pairs of point-like sources at the resolution of the ACA and present an extensive…
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