Host Galaxies of Hard X-ray Selected Type-2 Active Galactic Nuclei at Intermediate Redshifts

Abstract

We study properties of the host galaxies of 15 hard X-ray selected type-2 active galactic nuclei (AGNs) at intermediate redshifts (0.05<z<0.6) detected in ASCA surveys. The absorption corrected hard X-ray luminosities L 2-10 keV range from 1042 erg s-1 to 1045 erg s-1. We took the R-band image of these AGNs with the University of Hawaii 2.2 m telescope. Thanks to the intrinsic obscuration of nuclear light, we can decompose the galaxies with a spheroid component and a disk component. The resulting spheroid luminosities correlate with L 2-10 keV; higher (lower) X-ray luminosity AGNs tend to reside in luminous (less luminous) spheroids. It is also found that the hosts of luminous AGNs show a large spheroid-to-disk luminosity ratio (1), while those of less luminous AGNs spread between 0 and 1. The correlation between L 2-10keV and spheroid luminosity indicates that the relation between mass of a supermassive black hole (SMBH) and spheroid luminosity (BS-relation) at the intermediate redshifts. The BS-relation agrees with that in the local universe if the Eddington ratio of 0.24 is adopted, which is a mean value determined from our ASCA type-1 AGN sample at similar redshifts through the broad-line width and continuum luminosity. The present study demonstrates the effectiveness of using type-2 AGNs at high redshifts to study their host properties.

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