A meeting at z~3: Young massive galaxies and an AGN within 30kpc of the luminous QSO LBQS0302-0019
B. Husemann, G. Worseck, F. Arrigoni Battaia, A. A. C. Sander, T., Shanks

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution imaging to identify and analyze companion galaxies around a high-redshift quasar, revealing a young massive galaxy hosting an AGN that may influence the quasar’s environment and activity duration.
Contribution
It provides detailed characterization of the galaxy environment around a z=3.29 quasar, including the discovery of a young massive galaxy hosting an AGN, using combined HST and ground-based imaging.
Findings
Detected four companion objects near the quasar.
Identified a young massive galaxy hosting an AGN.
Suggested the galaxy's AGN may affect the quasar's ionization zone.
Abstract
Contrary to expectations from scenarios of black hole growth driven by galaxy interactions and mergers, dual active galactic nuclei (AGN) with kiloparsec separations are rarely observed and are very difficult to identify, in particular at high redshifts (i.e. z>2). Focussing on the recently discovered dual AGN system LBQS 0302-0019 at z=3.29, we seek to identify further group members in its environment and to understand their formation history through deep high-angular-resolution imaging. We present deep Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Wide-field Camera 3 near-infrared imaging of LBQS 0302-0019. In combination with ground-based VLT/HAWK-I imaging, we infer accurate sizes, colours, ages, and stellar masses of companion galaxies. We clearly detect four companion objects close to LBQS 0302-0019 that also have faint signatures in the ground-based images. We constrain light-weighted ages and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
