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A striking relationship between dust extinction and radio detection in DESI QSOs: evidence for a dusty blow-out phase in red QSOs

Authors :
Fawcett, V. A.
Alexander, D. M.
Brodzeller, A.
Edge, A. C.
Rosario, D. J.
Myers, A. D.
Aguilar, J.
Ahlen, S.
Alfarsy, R.
Brooks, D.
Canning, R.
Circosta, C.
Dawson, K.
de la Macorra, A.
Doel, P.
Fanning, K.
Font-Ribera, A.
Forero-Romero, J. E.
Gontcho, S. Gontcho A
Guy, J.
Harrison, C. M.
Honscheid, K.
Juneau, S.
Kehoe, R.
Kisner, T.
Kremin, A.
Landriau, M.
Manera, M.
Meisner, A. M.
Miquel, R.
Moustakas, J.
Nie, J.
Percival, W. J.
Poppett, C.
Pucha, R.
Rossi, G.
Schlegel, D.
Siudek, M.
Tarlé, G.
Weaver, B. A.
Zhou, Z.
Zou, H.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

We present the first eight months of data from our secondary target program within the ongoing Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) survey. Our program uses a mid-infrared and optical colour selection to preferentially target dust-reddened QSOs that would have otherwise been missed by the nominal DESI QSO selection. So far we have obtained optical spectra for 3038 candidates, of which ~70% of the high-quality objects (those with robust redshifts) are visually confirmed to be Type 1 QSOs, consistent with the expected fraction from the main DESI QSO survey. By fitting a dust-reddened blue QSO composite to the QSO spectra, we find they are well-fitted by a normal QSO with up to Av~4 mag of line-of-sight dust extinction. Utilizing radio data from the LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey (LoTSS) DR2, we identify a striking positive relationship between the amount of line-of-sight dust extinction towards a QSO and the radio detection fraction, that is not driven by radio-loud systems, redshift and/or luminosity effects. This demonstrates an intrinsic connection between dust reddening and the production of radio emission in QSOs, whereby the radio emission is most likely due to low-powered jets or winds/outflows causing shocks in a dusty environment. On the basis of this evidence we suggest that red QSOs may represent a transitional "blow-out" phase in the evolution of QSOs, where winds and outflows evacuate the dust and gas to reveal an unobscured blue QSO.<br />Comment: 21 pages, 17 figures, 6 tables, accepted by MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2308.14790
Document Type :
Working Paper