Bright [C II] 158 μm emission in a quasar host galaxy at z = 6.54

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Abstract

The [C ii] 158 μm fine-structure line is known to trace regions of active star formation and is the main coolant of the cold, neutral atomic medium. In this Letter, we report a strong detection of the [C ii] line in the host galaxy of the brightest quasar known at , the Pan-STARRS1 selected quasar PSO J036.5078+03.0498 (hereafter P036+03), using the IRAM NOEMA millimeter interferometer. Its [C ii] and total far-infrared luminosities are and , respectively. This results in an ratio of , which is at the high end of those found for active galaxies, though it is lower than the average found in typical main-sequence galaxies at . We also report a tentative additional line that we identify as a blended emission from the and H2O transitions. If confirmed, this would be the most distant detection of water emission to date. P036+03 rivals the current prototypical luminous J1148+5251 quasar at z = 6.42, in both rest-frame UV and [C ii] luminosities. Given its brightness and because it is visible from both hemispheres (unlike J1148+5251), P036+03 has the potential of becoming an important laboratory for the study of star formation and of the interstellar medium only ∼800 Myr after the Big Bang.

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Bañados, E., Decarli, R., Walter, F., Venemans, B. P., Farina, E. P., & Fan, X. (2015). Bright [C II] 158 μm emission in a quasar host galaxy at z = 6.54. Astrophysical Journal Letters, 805(1). https://doi.org/10.1088/2041-8205/805/1/L8

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