The VMC Survey -- XLIX. Discovery of a population of quasars dominated by nuclear dust emission behind the Magellanic Clouds
Clara M. Pennock, Jacco Th. van Loon, Joy O. Anih, Chandreyee Maitra,, Frank Haberl, Anne E. Sansom, Valentin D. Ivanov, Michael J. Cowley, Jos\'e, Afonso, Sonia Ant\'on, Maria-Rosa L. Cioni, Jessica E. M. Craig, Miroslav D., Filipovi\'c, Andrew M. Hopkins, Ambra Nanni

TL;DR
This study identifies a rare population of quasars behind the Magellanic Clouds, characterized by dominant nuclear dust emission and minimal host galaxy star formation, using multi-wavelength data and advanced analysis techniques.
Contribution
It introduces a new method combining t-SNE and multi-wavelength data to discover and analyze a rare class of AGN with unique dust emission properties.
Findings
Most dust emission is due to the AGN (>70%)
Host galaxies are transitioning into the green valley
Torus depletion correlates with increased X-ray luminosity
Abstract
Following the discovery of SAGE0536AGN ( 0.14), with the strongest 10-m silicate emission ever observed for an Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN), we discovered SAGE0534AGN ( 1.01), a similar AGN but with less extreme silicate emission. Both were originally mistaken as evolved stars in the Magellanic Clouds. Lack of far-infrared emission, and therefore star-formation, implies we are seeing the central engine of the AGN without contribution from the host galaxy. They could be a key link in galaxy evolution. We used a dimensionality reduction algorithm, t-SNE (t-distributed Stochastic Neighbourhood Embedding) with multi-wavelength data from Gaia EDR3, VISTA survey of the Magellanic Clouds, AllWISE and the Australian SKA Pathfinder to find these two unusual AGN are grouped with 16 other objects separated from the rest, suggesting a rare class. Our spectroscopy at SAAO/SALT…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
