COOL-LAMPS VIII: Known wide-separation lensed quasars and their host galaxies reveal a lack of evolution in $M_{\rm{BH}}/M_\star$ since $z\sim 3$
Aidan P. Cloonan, Gourav Khullar, Kate A. Napier, Michael D. Gladders,, H{\aa}kon Dahle, Riley Rosener, Jamar Sullivan Jr., Matthew B. Bayliss,, Nathalie Chicoine, Isaiah Escapa, Diego Garza, Josh Garza, Rowen Glusman,, Katya Gozman, Gabriela Horwath, Andi Kisare

TL;DR
This study uses wide-separation lensed quasars to investigate the evolution of the black hole to stellar mass ratio, finding little to no evolution since redshift 3, thus challenging some previous notions of co-evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed constraints on the $M_{BH}/M_*$ relation at high redshift using a new sample of WSLQs, showing minimal evolution compared to local relations.
Findings
WSLQs show less evolution in $M_{BH}/M_*$ than unlensed quasars at similar redshifts.
The $M_{BH}/M_*$ relation is consistent with no evolution since $z o 3$ within uncertainties.
Selection effects and calibration choices significantly impact the interpretation of evolution.
Abstract
Wide-separation lensed quasars (WSLQs) are a rare class of strongly lensed quasars, magnified by foreground massive galaxy clusters, with typically large magnifications of the multiple quasar images. They are a relatively unexplored opportunity for detailed study of quasar host galaxies. The current small sample of known WSLQs has a median redshift of , larger than most other samples of quasar host galaxies studied to date. Here, we derive precise constraints on the properties of six WSLQs and their host galaxies, using parametric surface brightness fitting, measurements of quasar emission lines, and stellar population synthesis of host galaxies in six WSLQ systems. Our results, with significant uncertainty, indicate that these six hosts are a mixture of star-forming and quiescent galaxies. To probe for co-evolution between AGNs and host galaxies, we model the offset from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
