The rocky road to quiescence: compaction and quenching of quasar host galaxies at z~2
H. R. Stacey, J. P. McKean, D. M. Powell, S. Vegetti, F. Rizzo, C., Spingola, M. W. Auger, R. J. Ivison, P. P. van der Werf

TL;DR
This study investigates the dust and gas properties of seven high-redshift quasar host galaxies, revealing two distinct types and suggesting some are in transition towards quiescence due to intense star formation and gas depletion.
Contribution
It provides detailed morphological and kinematic analysis of quasar hosts at z~2 using lens modelling, identifying two galaxy types and insights into their evolutionary stages.
Findings
Two types of quasar hosts: extended dusty star-forming and compact, high-density starbursts.
Some hosts show signs of transitioning into quiescence with low gas fractions.
Compact hosts have extremely high star formation rate surface densities, possibly Eddington-limited.
Abstract
We resolve the host galaxies of seven gravitationally lensed quasars at redshift 1.5 to 2.8 using observations with the Atacama Large (sub-)Millimetre Array. Using a visibility-plane lens modelling technique, we create pixellated reconstructions of the dust morphology, and CO line morphology and kinematics. We find that the quasar hosts in our sample can be distinguished into two types: 1) galaxies characterised by clumpy, extended dust distributions ( kpc) and mean star formation rate surface densities comparable to sub-mm-selected dusty star-forming galaxies ( M yr kpc); 2) galaxies that have sizes in dust emission similar to coeval passive galaxies and compact starbursts ( kpc), with high mean star formation rate surface densities ( 4004500 M yr kpc) that…
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.
