A Unique View of AGN-Driven Molecular Outflows: The Discovery of a Massive Galaxy Counterpart to a z=2.4 High-Metallicity Damped Lyman-α Absorber

Abstract

We report the discovery of a massive (M/M)=10.74+0.18-0.16 galaxy at the same redshift as a carbon-monoxide-bearing sub-damped Lyman α absorber (sub-DLA) seen in the spectrum of QSO J1439+1117. The galaxy, J1439B, is located 47 from the QSO sightline, a projected distance of 38 physical kpc at z=2.4189, and exhibits broad optical emission lines (σ[O III]=303 12~) with ratios characteristic of excitation by an active galactic nucleus (AGN). The galaxy has a factor of 9 lower star formation than is typical of star-forming galaxies of the same mass and redshift. The nearby sub-DLA is highly enriched, suggesting its galactic counterpart must be massive if it follows the z2 mass-metallicity relationship. Metallic absorption within the circumgalactic medium of the sub-DLA and J1439B is spread over a velocity range v > 1000 , suggesting an energetic origin. We explore the possibility that a different galaxy could be responsible for the rare absorber, and conclude that it is unlikely based on imaging, integral-field spectroscopy, and high-z massive galaxy pair statistics. We argue that the gas seen in absorption against the QSO was likely ejected from the galaxy J1439B and therefore provides a unique observational probe of AGN feedback in the distant universe.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…