Red quasars blow out molecular gas from galaxies during the peak of cosmic star formation

Author:

Stacey H R1ORCID,Costa T1ORCID,McKean J P23,Sharon C E4,Calistro Rivera G5,Glikman E6,van der Werf P P7

Affiliation:

1. Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics , Karl-Schwarzschild Street 1, D-85748, Garching bei München, Germany

2. ASTRON, Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy , Oude Hoogeveensedijk 4, NL-7991 PD, Dwingeloo, the Netherlands

3. Kapteyn Astronomical Institute, University of Groningen , P.O. Box 800, NL-9700 AV, Groningen, the Netherlands

4. Yale-NUS College , Singapore , 138527, Singapore

5. European Southern Observatory (ESO) , Karl-Schwarzschild Str. 2, D-85748, Garching bei München, Germany

6. Department of Physics, Middlebury College , Middlebury, VT 05753, USA

7. Leiden Observatory, Leiden University , P.O. Box 9513, NL-2300 RA, Leiden, the Netherlands

Abstract

ABSTRACT Recent studies have suggested that red quasars are a phase in quasar evolution when feedback from black hole accretion evacuates obscuring gas from the nucleus of the host galaxy. Here, we report a direct link between dust-reddening and molecular outflows in quasars at z ∼ 2.5. By examining the dynamics of warm molecular gas in the inner region of galaxies, we find evidence for outflows with velocities 500–1000 km s−1 and time-scales of ≈0.1 Myr that are due to ongoing quasar energy output. We infer outflows only in systems where quasar radiation pressure on dust in the vicinity of the black hole is sufficiently large to expel their obscuring gas column densities. This result is in agreement with theoretical models that predict radiative feedback regulates gas in the nuclear regions of galaxies and is a major driving mechanism of galactic-scale outflows of cold gas. Our findings suggest that radiative quasar feedback ejects star-forming gas from within nascent stellar bulges at velocities comparable to those seen on larger scales, and that molecules survive in outflows even from the most luminous quasars.

Funder

European Research Council

NASA

NED

ALMA

ESO

NSF

NINS

NRC

MOST

KASI

NAOJ

CNRS

MPG

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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