Obscuration beyond the nucleus: infrared quasars can be buried in extreme compact starbursts
Carolina Andonie, David M. Alexander, Claire Greenwell, Annagrazia, Puglisi, Brivael Laloux, Alba V. Alonso-Tetilla, Gabriela Calistro Rivera,, Chris Harrison, Ryan C. Hickox, Melanie Kaasinen, Andrea Lapi, Iv\'an E., L\'opez, Grayson Petter, Cristina Ramos Almeida

TL;DR
This study shows that in extreme starburst galaxies, the interstellar medium can heavily obscure quasars, contributing significantly to their obscuration beyond the traditional dusty torus model.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the ISM can cause heavy obscuration of quasars in compact starbursts, especially at high SFRs, expanding the understanding of quasar obscuration mechanisms.
Findings
Quasar obscured fraction increases with SFR beyond 300 M_sun/yr.
IR quasars and SMGs have similar compact sizes at high SFRs.
ISM can cause Compton-thick obscuration in extreme starburst hosts.
Abstract
In the standard quasar model, the accretion disk obscuration is due to the canonical dusty torus. Here, we argue that a substantial part of the quasar obscuration can come from the interstellar medium (ISM) when the quasars are embedded in compact starbursts. We use an obscuration-unbiased sample of 578 infrared (IR) quasars at and archival ALMA submillimeter host galaxy sizes to investigate the ISM contribution to the quasar obscuration. We calculate SFR and ISM column densities for the IR quasars and a control sample of submillimeter galaxies (SMGs) not hosting quasar activity and show that: (1) the quasar obscured fraction is constant up to , and then increases towards higher SFR, suggesting that the ISM obscuration plays a significant role in starburst host galaxies, and (2) at ,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
