Bibcode
Telesco, C.; Rodríguez Espinosa, J. M.; Imanishi, M.; Ichikawa, K.; González-Martín, O.; Esquej, P.; Colina, L.; Packham, C.; Levenson, N. A.; Díaz-Santos, T.; Pereira-Santaella, M.; Ramos Almeida, C.; Martínez-Paredes, M.; Aretxaga, I.; Hernán-Caballero, A.; Roche, P. F.; Poulton, R.; Alonso-Herrero, A.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, vol. 463, issue 3, pp. 2405-2424
Advertised on:
12
2016
Citations
17
Refereed citations
15
Description
We investigate the evolutionary connection between local IR-bright
galaxies ($\log L_{\rm IR}\ge 11.4\,L_\odot$) and quasars. We use high
angular resolution ($\sim$ 0.3-0.4 arcsec $\sim$ few hundred parsecs)
$8-13\,\mu$m ground-based spectroscopy to disentangle the AGN mid-IR
properties from those of star formation. The comparison between the
nuclear $11.3\,\mu$m PAH feature emission and that measured with
Spitzer/IRS indicates that the star formation is extended over a few kpc
in the IR-bright galaxies. The AGN contribution to the total IR
luminosity of IR-bright galaxies is lower than in quasars. Although the
dust distribution is predicted to change as IR-bright galaxies evolve to
IR-bright quasars and then to optical quasars, we show that the AGN
mid-IR emission of all the quasars in our sample is not significantly
different. In contrast, the nuclear emission of IR-bright galaxies with
low AGN contributions appears more heavily embedded in dust although
there is no clear trend with the interaction stage or projected nuclear
separation. This suggests that the changes in the distribution of the
nuclear obscuring material may be taking place rapidly and at different
interaction stages washing out the evidence of an evolutionary path.
When compared to normal AGN, the nuclear star formation activity of
quasars appears to be dimming whereas it is enhanced in some IR-bright
nuclei, suggesting that the latter are in an earlier star-formation
dominated phase.