Hot Dust-Obscured Galaxies (Hot DOGs) are a rare population of hyper-luminous
infrared galaxies discovered by the WISE mission. Despite the significant
obscuration of the AGN by dust in these systems, pronounced broad and
blue-shifted emission lines are often observed. Previous work has shown that 8
Hot DOGs, referred to as Blue-excess Hot DOGs (BHDs), present a blue excess
consistent with type 1 quasar emission in their UV-optical SEDs, which has been
shown to originate from the light of the obscured central engine scattered into
the line of sight. We present an analysis of the rest-frame optical emission
characteristics for 172 Hot DOGs through UV-MIR SED modeling and spectroscopic
details, with a particular focus on the identification of BHDs. We find that
while the optical emission observed in Hot DOGs is in most cases dominated by a
young stellar population, 26% of Hot DOGs show a significant enough blue excess
emission to be classified as BHDs. Based on their broad CIV and MgII lines, we
find that the MBH in BHDs range from 108.7 to $10^{10} \
M_{\odot}.WhenusingthesameemissionlinesinregularHotDOGs,wefindtheM_{\rm BH}estimatescovertheentirerangefoundforBHDswhilealsoextendingtosomewhatlowervalues.ThisagreementmayimplythatthebroadlinesinregularHotDOGsalsooriginatefromscatteredlightfromthecentralengine,justasinBHDs,althoughamoredetailedstudywouldbeneededtoruleoutanoutflow−drivennature.Similartoz\sim 6quasars,wefindthatHotDOGssitabovethelocalrelationbetweenstellarandblackholemass,suggestingeitherthatAGNfeedbackhasnotyetsignificantlysuppressedthestellarmassgrowthinthehostgalaxies,orthattheywillbeoutliersoftherelationwhenreachingz$=0.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa