Revealing the host galaxy of a quasar 2175 dust absorber at z = 2.12

Abstract

We report the first detection of the host galaxy of a strong 2175 dust absorber at z = 2.12 towards the background quasar SDSS J121143.42+083349.7 using HST/WFC3 IR F140W direct imaging and G141 grism spectroscopy. The spectroscopically confirmed host galaxy is located at a small impact parameter of ~ 5.5 kpc (~ 0.65''). The F140W image reveals a disk-like morphology with an effective radius of 2.24 0.08 kpc. The extracted 1D spectrum is dominated by a continuum with weak emission lines ([O] and [O]). The [O]-based unobscured star formation rate (SFR) is 9.4 2.6 Myr-1 assuming an [O]/Hα ratio of 1. The moderate 4000 break (Dn(4000) index 1.3) and Balmer absorption lines indicate that the host galaxy contains an evolved stellar population with an estimated stellar mass M* of (3 - 7) × 1010 M. The SFR and M* of the host galaxy are comparable to, though slightly lower than, those of typical emission-selected galaxies at z 2. As inferred from our absorption analysis in Ma et al. (2015, 2017, 2018), the host galaxy is confirmed to be a chemically-enriched, evolved, massive, and star-forming disk-like galaxy that is likely in the transition from a blue star-forming galaxy to a red quiescent galaxy.

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