1.75 h -1 kpc Separation Dual Active Galactic Nuclei at z = 0.36 in the Cosmos Field
Davis, Marc; Griffith, Roger L.; Stern, Daniel; Newman, Jeffrey A.; Comerford, Julia M.; Cooper, Michael C.; Gerke, Brian F.
United States
Abstract
We present strong evidence for dual active galactic nuclei (AGNs) in the z = 0.36 galaxy COSMOS J100043.15+020637.2. COSMOS Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging of the galaxy shows a tidal tail, indicating that the galaxy recently underwent a merger, as well as two bright point sources near the galaxy's center. The luminosities of these sources (derived from the HST image) and their emission line flux ratios (derived from Keck/DEIMOS slit spectroscopy) suggest that both are AGNs and not star-forming regions or supernovae. Observations from zCOSMOS, the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, XMM-Newton, Spitzer, and the Very Large Array fortify the evidence for AGN activity. With HST imaging we measure a projected spatial offset between the two AGNs of 1.75 ± 0.03 h -1 kpc, and with DEIMOS we measure a 150 ± 40 km s-1 line-of-sight velocity offset between the two AGNs. Combined, these observations provide substantial evidence that COSMOS J100043.15+020637.2 is a merger-remnant galaxy with dual AGNs.