2016ApJ...819..111A


Query : 2016ApJ...819..111A

2016ApJ...819..111A - Astrophys. J., 819, 111 (2016/March-2)

Hot dust obscured galaxies with excess blue light: dual AGN or single AGN under extreme conditions?

ASSEF R.J., WALTON D.J., BRIGHTMAN M., STERN D., ALEXANDER D., BAUER F., BLAIN A.W., DIAZ-SANTOS T., EISENHARDT P.R.M., FINKELSTEIN S.L., HICKOX R.C., TSAI C.-W. and WU J.W.

Abstract (from CDS):

Hot dust-obscured galaxies (Hot DOGs) are a population of hyper-luminous infrared galaxies identified by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) mission from their very red mid-IR colors, and characterized by hot dust temperatures (T > 60 K). Several studies have shown clear evidence that the IR emission in these objects is powered by a highly dust-obscured active galactic nucleus (AGN) that shows close to Compton-thick absorption at X-ray wavelengths. Thanks to the high AGN obscuration, the host galaxy is easily observable, and has UV/optical colors usually consistent with those of a normal galaxy. Here we discuss a sub-population of eight Hot DOGs that show enhanced rest-frame UV/optical emission. We discuss three scenarios that might explain the excess UV emission: (i) unobscured light leaked from the AGN by reflection over the dust or by partial coverage of the accretion disk; (ii) a second unobscured AGN in the system; or (iii) a luminous young starburst. X-ray observations can help discriminate between these scenarios. We study in detail the blue excess Hot DOG WISE J020446.13-050640.8, which was serendipitously observed by Chandra/ACIS-I for 174.5 ks. The X-ray spectrum is consistent with a single, hyper-luminous, highly absorbed AGN, and is strongly inconsistent with the presence of a secondary unobscured AGN. Based on this, we argue that the excess blue emission in this object is most likely either due to reflection or a co-eval starburst. We favor the reflection scenario as the unobscured star formation rate needed to power the UV/optical emission would be ≳1000 M/yr. Deep polarimetry observations could confirm the reflection hypothesis.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: active - galaxies: evolution - galaxies: high-redshift - infrared: galaxies - quasars: general

Simbad objects: 12

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Number of rows : 12
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 WISE J001926.88-104633.3 G 00 19 26.88 -10 46 33.3           ~ 1 0
2 WISE J020446.13-050640.8 G 02 04 46.13 -05 06 40.8           ~ 7 0
3 NAME Cetus Field reg 02 05 20 -04 55.0           ~ 27 0
4 SDSS J022052.11+013711.1 QSO 02 20 52.115 +01 37 11.15           ~ 25 0
5 WISE J083153.25+014010.7 G 08 31 53.257 +01 40 10.76           ~ 8 0
6 WISE J085929.94+482302.3 G 08 59 29.94 +48 23 02.3           ~ 9 0
7 WISE J105045.92+401359.1 G 10 50 45.92 +40 13 59.1           ~ 2 0
8 WISE J131628.53+351235.1 G 13 16 28.53 +35 12 35.1           ~ 5 0
9 WISE J153550.03+310054.9 G 15 35 50.03 +31 00 54.9           ~ 1 0
10 WISE J162101.29+254238.3 G 16 21 01.29 +25 42 38.3           ~ 1 0
11 WISEA J181417.29+341224.8 QSO 18 14 17.29 +34 12 24.9           ~ 24 0
12 WISE J224607.55-052634.9 QSO 22 46 07.552 -05 26 34.99           ~ 41 0

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