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An evolutionary missing link? A modest-mass early-type galaxy hosting an oversized nuclear black hole

van Loon, Jacco Th.; Sansom, Anne E.

Authors

Anne E. Sansom



Abstract

SAGE1C J053634.78−722658.5 is a galaxy at redshift z = 0.14, discovered behind the Large Magellanic Cloud in the SpitzerSpace Telescope‘Surveying the Agents of Galaxy Evolution’ Spectroscopy survey. It has very strong silicate emission at 10 μm but negligible far-IR and UV emission. This makes it a candidate for a bare active galactic nuclei (AGN) source in the IR, perhaps seen pole-on, without significant IR emission from the host galaxy. In this paper we present optical spectra taken with the Southern African Large Telescope to investigate the nature of the underlying host galaxy and its AGN. We find broad H α emission characteristic of an AGN, plus absorption lines associated with a mature stellar population (>9 Gyr), and refine its redshift determination to z = 0.1428 ± 0.0001. There is no evidence for any emission lines associated with star formation. This remarkable object exemplifies the need for separating the emission from any AGN from that of the host galaxy when employing IR diagnostic diagrams. We estimate the black hole mass, MBH = 3.5 ± 0.8 × 108 M⊙, host galaxy mass, Mstars=2.52.51.2×1010
M⊙, and accretion luminosity, Lbol(AGN) = 5.3 ± 0.4 × 1045 erg s−1 (≈12 per cent of the Eddington luminosity), and find the AGN to be more prominent than expected for a host galaxy of this modest size. The old age is in tension with the downsizing paradigm in which this galaxy would recently have transformed from a star-forming disc galaxy into an early-type, passively evolving galaxy.

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Sep 8, 2015
Publication Date Nov 1, 2015
Deposit Date May 30, 2023
Journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Print ISSN 0035-8711
Electronic ISSN 1365-2966
Publisher Oxford University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 453
Issue 3
Pages 2342-2349
DOI https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv1787
Keywords Space and Planetary Science; Astronomy and Astrophysics