Obscuration beyond the nucleus: infrared quasars can be buried in extreme compact starbursts

Andonie, Carolina; Alexander, David M.; Greenwell, Claire; Puglisi, Annagrazia; Laloux, Brivael; Alonso-Tetilla, Alba V.; Calistro Rivera, Gabriela; Harrison, Chris; Hickox, Ryan C.; Kaasinen, Melanie; Lapi, Andrea; López, Iván E.; Petter, Grayson; Ramos Almeida, Cristina; Rosario, David J.; Shankar, Francesco; Villforth, Carolin
Bibliographical reference

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Advertised on:
1
2024
Number of authors
17
IAC number of authors
1
Citations
7
Refereed citations
4
Description
In the standard quasar model, the accretion disc obscuration is due to the canonical dusty torus. Here, we argue that a substantial part of the quasar obscuration can come from the interstellar medium (ISM) when the quasars are embedded in compact starbursts. We use an obscuration-unbiased sample of 578 infrared (IR) quasars at z ≈ 1-3 and archival Atacama Large Millimetre/submillimetre Array submillimetre host galaxy sizes to investigate the ISM contribution to the quasar obscuration. We calculate star formation rates (SFR) and ISM column densities for the IR quasars and a control sample of submillimetre galaxies (SMGs) not hosting quasar activity and show that: (1) the quasar obscured fraction is constant up to $\rm SFR\approx 300 \: {\rm M}_{\odot } \: yr^{-1}$, and then increases towards higher SFR, suggesting that the ISM obscuration plays a significant role in starburst host galaxies, and (2) at $\rm SFR\gtrsim 300 \: {\rm M}_{\odot } \: yr^{-1}$, the SMGs and IR quasars have similarly compact submillimetre sizes ($R_{\rm e}\approx 0.5{\!-\!}3\,\mathrm{ kpc}$) and consequently, the ISM can heavily obscure the quasar, even reaching Compton-thick ($N_{\rm H}\gt 10^{24} \rm \: cm^{-2}$) levels in extreme cases. Based on our results, we infer that ${\approx} 10{\!-\!}30~{{ \rm per\ cent}}$ of the IR quasars with $\rm SFR\gtrsim 300 \: {\rm M}_{\odot } \: yr^{-1}$ are obscured solely by the ISM.