# The mid-infrared and CO gas properties of an extreme star-forming   FeLoBAL quasar

**Authors:** Lura K. Pitchford, Duncan Farrah, Katherine Alatalo, Jos\'e Afonso,, Andreas Efstathiou, Evanthia Hatziminaoglou, Mark Lacy, Tanya Urrutia, Giulio, Violino

arXiv: 1906.01640 · 2019-06-06

## TL;DR

This study characterizes a high-redshift FeLoBAL quasar, revealing its substantial molecular gas, intense starburst activity, and infrared properties, suggesting it is transitioning from an obscured starburst to a classical quasar.

## Contribution

It provides detailed multi-wavelength analysis of a FeLoBAL quasar, highlighting its extreme star formation and molecular gas properties, and offers insights into its evolutionary stage.

## Key findings

- Star formation rate of about 2000 solar masses per year.
- Molecular gas mass of approximately 7.3 x 10^{10} solar masses.
- Infrared emission dominated by a starburst component.

## Abstract

We present a detailed study of a high-redshift iron low-ionization broad absorption line (FeLoBAL) quasar (SDSS1214 at $z = 1.046$), including new interferometric $^{12}$CO $J$=2-1 observations, optical through far-infrared photometry, and mid-infrared spectroscopy. The CO line is well-fit by a single Gaussian centered 40 kms$^{-1}$ away from the systemic velocity and implies a total molecular gas mass of $M_\textrm{gas} = 7.3 \times 10^{10} \textrm{M}_\odot$. The infrared SED requires three components: an active galactic nucleus (AGN) torus, an AGN polar dust component, and a starburst. The starburst dominates the infrared emission with a luminosity of log($L_\textrm{SB}[\textrm{L}_\odot]) = 12.91^{+0.02}_{-0.02}$, implying a star formation rate of about 2000 $\textrm{M}_{\odot}$yr$^{-1}$, the highest known among FeLoBAL quasars. The AGN torus and polar dust components are less luminous, at log($L_\textrm{AGN}[\textrm{L}_\odot]) = 12.36^{+0.14}_{-0.15}$ and log($L_\textrm{dust}[\textrm{L}_\odot]) = 11.75^{+0.26}_{-0.46}$, respectively. If all of the molecular gas is used to fuel the ongoing star formation, then the lower limit on the subsequent duration of the starburst is 40 Myr. We do not find conclusive evidence that the AGN is affecting the CO gas reservoir. The properties of SDSS1214 are consistent with it representing the endpoint of an obscured starburst transitioning through a LoBAL phase to that of a classical quasar.

## Full text

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## Figures

18 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.01640/full.md

## References

102 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.01640/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.01640