The kinematics and ionization structure of the extended emission-line region of QSO E1821+643

Author:

Rosborough Sara A1ORCID,Robinson A1,Seelig T2

Affiliation:

1. School of Physics and Astronomy, and Laboratory for Multiwavelength Astrophysics, Rochester Institute of Technology , Rochester, NY 14623, USA

2. National Radio Astronomy Observatory , Socorro, NM 87801, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT The most luminous quasars are created by major, gas-rich mergers and E1821+643, an optically luminous quasar situated at the centre of a cool-core cluster, appears to be in the late stages of the post-merger blowout phase. This quasar is also identified as a gravitational recoil candidate, in which the supermassive black hole (SMBH) has received a recoil kick due to anisotropic emission of gravitational waves during the coalescence of a progenitor SMBH binary. We analyse long-slit spectra of the extended, ionized gas surrounding E1821+643 to study its kinematics and ionization. We have identified three kinematically distinct components, which we associate, respectively, with a wide-angle polar wind from the nucleus, kinematically undisturbed gas, and a redshifted arc-like structure of gas, at a distance of 3–4 arcsec (13–18 kpc) from the nucleus. The latter component coincides with the northern and eastern extremities of an arc of [O iii] emission seen in HST images. This feature could trace a tidal tail originating from a merger with a gas-rich galaxy to the south-east of the nucleus, whose presence has been inferred by Aravena et al. from the detection of CO emission. Alternatively, the arc could be the remnant of a shell of gas swept up by a powerful quasar wind. The emission-line ratios of the extended gas are consistent with photoionization by the quasar, but a contribution from radiative shocks cannot be excluded.

Funder

NASA

ESA

Space Telescope Science Institute

National Science Foundation

National Research Council Canada

Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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