Large Amounts of Optically Obscured Star Formation in the Host Galaxies of Some Type 2 Quasars

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Published 2007 October 12 © 2007. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation M. Lacy et al 2007 ApJ 669 L61 DOI 10.1086/523851

1538-4357/669/2/L61

Abstract

We present Hubble Space Telescope images and spectral energy distributions from optical to infrared wavelengths for a sample of six 0.3 < z < 0.8 type 2 quasars selected in the mid-infrared using data from the Spitzer Space Telescope. All the host galaxies show some signs of disturbance. Most seem to possess dusty, star-forming disks. The disk inclination, estimated from the axial ratio of the hosts, correlates with the depth of the silicate feature in the mid-infrared spectra, implying that at least some of the reddening toward the AGN arises in the host galaxy. The star formation rates in these objects, as inferred from the strengths of the PAH features and far-infrared continuum, range from 3 to 90 M yr-1, but are mostly much larger than those inferred from the [O II] λ3727 emission-line luminosity, due to obscuration. Taken together with studies of type 2 quasar hosts from samples selected in the optical and X-ray, this is consistent with previous suggestions that two types of extinction processes operate within the type 2 quasar population, namely, a component due to the dusty torus in the immediate environment of the AGN, and a more extended component due to a dusty, star-forming disk.

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10.1086/523851