We present near-infrared (NIR) spectra, obtained with SINFONI and XShooter observations at ESO VLT, of nine dusty, red QSOs at 1.2 < z < 2.6. The sources are hard X-ray detected, characterized by cold absorption (NH > 1021–1022 cm−2) and show a broad Hα component in the NIR spectra. We complement this sample with 12 additional sources taken from the literature with similar properties resulting in a total sample of 21 X-ray-obscured, intermediate-type (1.8–1.9), dusty reddened QSOs. From the broad Hα line, we have computed the black hole (BH) masses through the virial formula and derived Eddington ratios. Moreover, from optical/IR multicomponent spectral energy distribution fitting we have derived the stellar mass of their host galaxies and their star formation rates. We find that most of the sources in our sample are hosted in starburst and main-sequence star-forming galaxies with Eddington ratios λ > 0.1. We find a strong trend with the BH mass, i.e. less massive objects are scattered below and above the local relation while the most massive ones are mainly located above it. We also studied the evolution of these sources on the MBH-M* plane compared to a sample of optically blue type-1 QSOs and we find that obscured red QSOs show a ratio of MBH to M* that increases with redshift which is consistent with or slightly lower than what has been found for blue QSOs. These sources may represent the blow-out phase at the end of the rapid BH growth and immediately preceding the classical blue QSOs typically sampled in optical surveys. They in fact show evidence of outflows in the ionized gas component, but their BH has already fully formed.

The MBH-M* relation for X-ray-obscured, red QSOs at 1.2 < z < 2.6 / A. Bongiorno; R. Maiolino; M. Brusa; A. Marconi; E. Piconcelli; A. Lamastra; M. Cano-Diaz; A. Schulze; B. Magnelli; C. Vignali; F. Fiore; N. Menci; G. Cresci; F. La Franca; A. Merloni. - In: MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY. - ISSN 0035-8711. - ELETTRONICO. - 443:(2014), pp. 2077-2091. [10.1093/mnras/stu1248]

The MBH-M* relation for X-ray-obscured, red QSOs at 1.2 < z < 2.6

MARCONI, ALESSANDRO;
2014

Abstract

We present near-infrared (NIR) spectra, obtained with SINFONI and XShooter observations at ESO VLT, of nine dusty, red QSOs at 1.2 < z < 2.6. The sources are hard X-ray detected, characterized by cold absorption (NH > 1021–1022 cm−2) and show a broad Hα component in the NIR spectra. We complement this sample with 12 additional sources taken from the literature with similar properties resulting in a total sample of 21 X-ray-obscured, intermediate-type (1.8–1.9), dusty reddened QSOs. From the broad Hα line, we have computed the black hole (BH) masses through the virial formula and derived Eddington ratios. Moreover, from optical/IR multicomponent spectral energy distribution fitting we have derived the stellar mass of their host galaxies and their star formation rates. We find that most of the sources in our sample are hosted in starburst and main-sequence star-forming galaxies with Eddington ratios λ > 0.1. We find a strong trend with the BH mass, i.e. less massive objects are scattered below and above the local relation while the most massive ones are mainly located above it. We also studied the evolution of these sources on the MBH-M* plane compared to a sample of optically blue type-1 QSOs and we find that obscured red QSOs show a ratio of MBH to M* that increases with redshift which is consistent with or slightly lower than what has been found for blue QSOs. These sources may represent the blow-out phase at the end of the rapid BH growth and immediately preceding the classical blue QSOs typically sampled in optical surveys. They in fact show evidence of outflows in the ionized gas component, but their BH has already fully formed.
2014
443
2077
2091
A. Bongiorno; R. Maiolino; M. Brusa; A. Marconi; E. Piconcelli; A. Lamastra; M. Cano-Diaz; A. Schulze; B. Magnelli; C. Vignali; F. Fiore; N. Menci; G. Cresci; F. La Franca; A. Merloni
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/890119
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