分类: 天文学 >> 天文学 提交时间: 2023-02-19
摘要: Extremely red quasars, with bolometric luminosities exceeding $10^{47}$ erg s$^{-1}$, are a fascinating high-redshift population that is absent in the local universe. They are the best candidates for supermassive black holes accreting at rates at or above the Eddington limit, and they are associated with the most rapid and powerful outflows of ionized gas known to date. They are also hosted by massive galaxies. Here we present the first integral field unit (IFU) observations of a high-redshift quasar obtained by the Near Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec) on board the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), which targeted SDSSJ165202.64+172852.3, an extremely red quasar at $z=2.94$. JWST observations reveal extended ionized gas - as traced by [OIII]$\lambda$5007\AA - in the host galaxy of the quasar, its outflow, and the circumgalactic medium. The complex morphology and kinematics imply that the quasar resides in a very dense environment with several interacting companion galaxies within projected distances of 10-15 kpc. The high density of the environment and the large velocities of the companion galaxies suggest that this system may represent the core of a forming cluster of galaxies. The system is a good candidate for a merger of two or more dark matter halos, each with a mass of a few $10^{13}$ M$_\odot$ and traces potentially one of the densest knots at $z\sim3$.
分类: 天文学 >> 天文学 提交时间: 2023-02-19
摘要: Quantifying the connection between galaxies and their host dark matter halos has been key for testing cosmological models on various scales. Below $M_\star \sim 10^9\,M_\odot$, such studies have primarily relied on the satellite galaxy population orbiting the Milky Way. Here we present new constraints on the connection between satellite galaxies and their host dark matter subhalos using the largest sample of satellite galaxies in the Local Volume ($D \lesssim 12\,\mathrm{Mpc}$) to date. We use $250$ confirmed and $71$ candidate dwarf satellites around 27 Milky Way (MW)-like hosts from the Exploration of Local VolumE Satellites (ELVES) Survey and use the semi-analytical SatGen model for predicting the population of dark matter subhalos expected in the same volume. Through a Bayesian model comparison of the observed and the forward-modeled satellite stellar mass functions (SSMF), we infer the satellite stellar-to-halo mass relation. We find that the observed SSMF is best reproduced when subhalos are populated by a relation of the form $M_\star \propto M^\alpha_\mathrm{peak}$, with a moderate slope of $\alpha=2.0 \pm 0.1$, and a scatter that grows with decreasing $M_\mathrm{peak}$. We find a significantly larger scatter towards lower peak halo masses, compared to prior studies that relied mainly on MW satellites. We conclude that this scatter results from a combination of star formation stochasticity and host-to-host scatter. Our new model for the satellite-subhalo connection has important implications for both of these baryonic-impacted effects, as well as on dark matter physics.