Gravitational lensing reveals extreme dust-obscured star formation in quasar host galaxies
Abstract
We have observed 104 gravitationally-lensed quasars at z1-4 with Herschel/SPIRE, the largest such sample ever studied. By targeting gravitational lenses, we probe intrinsic far-infrared (FIR) luminosities and star formation rates (SFRs) more typical of the population than the extremely luminous sources that are otherwise accessible. We detect 72 objects with Herschel/SPIRE and find 66 percent (69 sources) of the sample have spectral energy distributions (SEDs) characteristic of dust emission. For 53 objects with sufficiently constrained SEDs, we find a median effective dust temperature of 38+12-5 K. By applying the radio-infrared correlation, we find no evidence for an FIR excess which is consistent with star-formation-heated dust. We derive a median magnification-corrected FIR luminosity of 3.6+4.8-2.4~× 1011~ L and median SFR of 120+160-80~ M~yr-1 for 94 quasars with redshifts. We find 10 percent of our sample have FIR properties similar to typical dusty star-forming galaxies at z2-3 and a range of SFRs <20-10000~ M~yr-1 for our sample as a whole. These results are in line with current models of quasar evolution and suggests a coexistence of dust-obscured star formation and AGN activity is typical of most quasars. We do not find a statistically-significant difference in the FIR luminosities of quasars in our sample with a radio excess relative to the radio-infrared correlation. Synchrotron emission is found to dominate at FIR wavelengths for <15 percent of those sources classified as powerful radio galaxies.
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