The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2023)

First Results from the JWST Early Release Science Program Q3D: Ionization Cone, Clumpy Star Formation, and Shocks in a z = 3 Extremely Red Quasar Host

  • Andrey Vayner,
  • Nadia L. Zakamska,
  • Yuzo Ishikawa,
  • Swetha Sankar,
  • Dominika Wylezalek,
  • David S. N. Rupke,
  • Sylvain Veilleux,
  • Caroline Bertemes,
  • Jorge K. Barrera-Ballesteros,
  • Hsiao-Wen Chen,
  • Nadiia Diachenko,
  • Andy D. Goulding,
  • Jenny E. Greene,
  • Kevin N. Hainline,
  • Fred Hamann,
  • Timothy Heckman,
  • Sean D. Johnson,
  • Hui Xian Grace Lim,
  • Weizhe Liu,
  • Dieter Lutz,
  • Nora Lützgendorf,
  • Vincenzo Mainieri,
  • Ryan McCrory,
  • Grey Murphree,
  • Nicole P. H. Nesvadba,
  • Patrick Ogle,
  • Eckhard Sturm,
  • Lillian Whitesell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ace784
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 955, no. 2
p. 92

Abstract

Read online

Massive galaxies formed most actively at redshifts z = 1–3 during the period known as “cosmic noon.” Here we present an emission-line study of the extremely red quasar SDSSJ165202.64+172852.3’s host galaxy at z = 2.94, based on observations with the Near Infrared Spectrograph integral field unit on board JWST. We use standard emission-line diagnostic ratios to map the sources of gas ionization across the host and a swarm of companion galaxies. The quasar dominates the photoionization, but we also discover shock-excited regions orthogonal to the ionization cone and the quasar-driven outflow. These shocks could be merger-induced or—more likely, given the presence of a powerful galactic-scale quasar outflow—these are signatures of wide-angle outflows that can reach parts of the galaxy that are not directly illuminated by the quasar. Finally, the kinematically narrow emission associated with the host galaxy presents as a collection of 1 kpc–scale clumps forming stars at a rate of at least 200 M _⊙ yr ^−1 . The interstellar medium within these clumps shows high electron densities, reaching up to 3000 cm ^−3 , with metallicities ranging from half to a third solar with a positive metallicity gradient, and V -band extinctions up to 3 mag. The star formation conditions are far more extreme in these regions than in local star-forming galaxies but consistent with those of massive galaxies at cosmic noon. The JWST observations simultaneously reveal an archetypal rapidly forming massive galaxy undergoing a merger, a clumpy starburst, an episode of obscured near-Eddington quasar activity, and an extremely powerful quasar outflow.

Keywords