Issue |
A&A
Volume 443, Number 1, November III 2005
|
|
---|---|---|
Page(s) | 61 - 78 | |
Section | Extragalactic astronomy | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20040422 | |
Published online | 21 October 2005 |
An optical imaging study of 0.4 ≤ z ≤ 0.8 quasar host galaxies
II. Analysis and interpretation
1
Tuorla Observatory, Väisäläntie 20, 215 00 Piikkiö, Finland e-mail: eva.orndahl@utu.fi
2
Department of Astronomy and Space Physics, Uppsala University, Box 515, 751 20 Uppsala, Sweden
Received:
10
March
2004
Accepted:
22
June
2005
We performed optical imaging of 102 radio-loud and radio-quiet quasars
at , of which 91 fields were found suitable for
host galaxy analysis after the deselection of saturated and otherwise flawed
images. The data sets were obtained
mainly in the R band, but also in the V and I or Gunn i band, and were
presented in Rönnback et al.(1996, MNRAS, 283, 282) and Örndahl et al. (2003, A&A, 404, 883). In this paper we combine the
two above-mentioned samples and also separately discuss additional hosts,
extracted from data taken
by Wold et al. (2000, MNRAS, 316, 267; 2001, MNRAS, 323, 231). The joint sample forms a sizeable fraction
of the to-date total number of observed sources at intermediate
redshifts and increases the number of resolved radio-quiet hosts at
considerably.
Equal numbers of radio-loud and radio-quiet objects were observed,
resulting in a detection rate of 79% for the radio-loud hosts
and 66% for the radio-quiet hosts.
Profile fitting could only be carried
out for a minority of the sample, but it results in predominantly elliptical
morphologies. This is consistent with the mean values of the axial ratios,
for which we find
for both radio-quiet and
radio-loud hosts, just as in the case of normal elliptical galaxies.
The mean absolute
magnitudes of the radio-loud and radio-quiet hosts is MR=-23.5 in both
cases.
This similarity between the mean magnitudes of the two types of host galaxy
is also seen in the other imaged bands.
While the radio-loud host absolute R magnitudes are correlated with
redshift, only a weak trend of the same sort
is seen for the radio-quiet host magnitudes.
Note, however, that the sample is not fully resolved and that the detection
limit, in combination with the relationship between host and nuclear
luminosity,
may conspire in creating the illusion of an upturn in magnitude.
The average nucleus-to-host galaxy luminosity ratios of the radio-loud and
radio-quiet objects do not differ significantly in any band,
nor is the difference
between the average luminosity ratios of flat spectrum and
steep spectrum radio-loud quasars larger than
. Thus, no
effect of beaming (as expected in the unifying scheme) is seen.
The colours of both radio-loud and radio-quiet
host galaxies are found to be as blue as present-day late-type spirals and
starburst galaxies. These blue colours are most likely due neither
to galaxy evolution
over the range, which only gives rise to a colour shift
of ~0.2 mag, nor to
scattered nuclear light, since colours determined from annular apertures
yield very similar results. Since close companions in projection are not
uncommon
(and a few sources even exhibit tidal tail-like features and other signs of
interaction), ongoing star formation is a reasonable
explanation of the blue host colours.
As multiple-band imaging primarily was carried out for quasars showing
indications of the presence of a host galaxy, the colour analysis results are
valid for host galaxies which are
large, bright, have low nucleus-to-host luminosity ratios, and/or
display large scale disturbances, but cannot however safely be generalised to
hold for the quasar host galaxy population at intermediate redshift as
a whole.
Key words: galaxies: active / galaxies: quasars: general / galaxies: fundamental parameters / galaxies: photometry
© ESO, 2005
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