A Multiwavelength Study of ELAN Environments (AMUSE$^2$). Mass budget, satellites spin alignment and gas infall in a massive $z\sim3$ quasar host halo
Fabrizio Arrigoni Battaia, Chian-Chou Chen, Hau-Yu Baobab Liu, Carlos, De Breuck, Maud Galametz, Michele Fumagalli, Yujin Yang, Anita Zanella,, Allison Man, Aura Obreja, J. Xavier Prochaska, Eduardo Ba\~nados, Joseph F., Hennawi, Emanuele P. Farina, Martin A. Zwaan

TL;DR
This study investigates the environment of a $z\\sim3$ quasar host with an ELAN, revealing details about its mass, gas content, star formation, and satellite alignments through multiwavelength observations, suggesting its evolution into a giant elliptical galaxy.
Contribution
First comprehensive multiwavelength analysis of a $z\sim3$ ELAN environment, combining data to estimate mass, gas, and star formation, and exploring satellite alignments and gas infall signatures.
Findings
The quasar host is the most star-forming and massive galaxy in the system.
All embedded objects have similar molecular gas reservoirs, indicating short depletion times.
The system's total dark matter halo mass suggests evolution into a giant elliptical galaxy.
Abstract
The systematic targeting of extended Ly emission around high-redshift quasars resulted in the discovery of rare and bright Enormous Ly Nebulae (ELANe) associated with multiple active galactic nuclei (AGN). We here initiate "a multiwavelength study of ELAN environments" (AMUSE) focusing on the ELAN around the quasar SDSS J1040+1020, a.k.a. the Fabulous ELAN. We report on VLT/HAWK-I, APEX/LABOCA, JCMT/SCUBA-2, SMA/850m, ALMA/CO(5-4) and 2mm observations and compare them to previously published VLT/MUSE data. The continuum and line detections enable a first estimate of the star-formation rates, dust, stellar and molecular gas masses in four objects associated with the ELAN (three AGNs and one Ly emitter), confirming that the quasar host is the most star-forming ( M yr) and massive galaxy (…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
