Morphological asymmetries of quasar host galaxies with Subaru Hyper Suprime-Cam

Abstract

How does the host galaxy morphology influence a central quasar or vice versa? We address this question by measuring the asymmetries of 2424 SDSS quasar hosts at 0.2<z<0.80.2<z<0.8 using broad-band (grizygrizy) images from the Hyper Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program. Control galaxies (without quasars) are selected by matching the redshifts and stellar masses of the quasar hosts. A two-step pipeline is run to decompose the PSF and \sersic\ components, and then measure asymmetry indices (ACASA_{\rm CAS}, AouterA_{\rm outer}, and AshapeA_{\rm shape}) of each quasar host and control galaxy. We find a mild correlation between host asymmetry and AGN bolometric luminosity (LbolL_{\rm bol}) for the full sample (spearman correlation of 0.37) while a stronger trend is evident at the highest luminosities (Lbol>45L_{\rm bol}>45). This then manifests itself into quasar hosts being more asymmetric, on average, when they harbor a more massive and highly accreting black hole. The merger fraction also positively correlates with LbolL_{\rm bol} and reaches up to 35\% for the most luminous. Compared to control galaxies, quasar hosts are marginally more asymmetric (excess of 0.017 in median at 9.4σ\sigma level) and the merger fractions are similar (∼16.5%\sim 16.5\%). We quantify the dependence of asymmetry on optical band which demonstrates that mergers are more likely to be identified with the bluer bands and the correlation between LbolL_{\rm bol} and asymmetry is also stronger in such bands. We stress that the band dependence, indicative of a changing stellar population, is an important factor in considering the influence of mergers on AGN activity.Comment: 27 pages, 28 figure

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