Abstract
A sample of 27 low-redshift, mostly cool, ultraluminous infrared
galaxies (ULIRGs) has been imaged at 1.6 μm with the Hubble Space
Telescope (HST) Near-Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer
(NICMOS). The majority (67%) of the sample's galaxies are
multiple-nucleus galaxies with projected separations of up to 17 kpc,
and the rest of the sample (33%) are single-nucleus galaxies, as
determined by the NICMOS angular resolution limit. The average observed,
integrated (host+nucleus) H magnitude of our HST H sample ULIRGs is
-24.3, slightly above that of an L* galaxy
(MH=-24.2), and 52% of the sample's galaxies have
sub-L* luminosities. The ULIRGs in the HST H sample are not
generated as a result of the merging of two luminous (i.e.,
>=L*) spiral galaxies. Instead, the interactions and
mergers occur in general between two, or in some cases more, less
massive sub-L* (0.3-0.5L*) galaxies. Only one out
of the 49 nuclei identified in the entire HST H sample has the
properties of a bright quasar-like nucleus. On average, the brightest
nuclei in the HST H sample galaxies (i.e., cool ULIRGs) are 1.2 mag
fainter than warm ULIRGs and low-luminosity Bright Quasar Survey quasars
(BQS QSOs) and 2.6 mag fainter than high-luminosity BQS QSOs. Since the
progenitor galaxies involved in the merger are sub-L*
galaxies, the mass of the central black hole in these ULIRGs would be
only about (1-2)×107 Msolar, if the
bulge-to-black hole mass ratio of nearby galaxies holds for ULIRGs. The
estimated mass of the central black hole is similar to that of nearby
Seyfert 2 galaxies but at least 1 order of magnitude lower than the
massive black holes thought to be located at the center of
high-luminosity QSOs. Massive nuclear starbursts with constant star
formation rates of 10-40 Msolar yr-1 could
contribute significantly to the nuclear H-band flux and are consistent
with the observed nuclear H-band magnitudes of the ULIRGs in the HST H
sample. An evolutionary merging scenario is proposed for the generation
of the different types of ULIRGs and QSOs on the basis of the masses of
the progenitors involved in the merging process. According to this
scenario, cool ULIRGs would be the end product of the merging of two or
more low-mass (0.3L*-0.5L*) disk galaxies. Warm
ULIRGs and low-luminosity QSOs would be generated by a merger involving
intermediate-mass (0.5L*) disk galaxies. Under this scenario, warm ULIRGs
could still be the dust-enshrouded phases of UV-bright low-luminosity
QSOs, but cool ULIRGs, which are most ULIRGs, would not evolve into
QSOs.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 546-554 |
Journal | Astrophysical Journal |
Volume | 563 |
Publication status | Published - 1 Dec 2001 |
Keywords
- Galaxies: Active
- Galaxies: Interactions
- Galaxies: Nuclei
- Galaxies: Starburst
- Infrared: Galaxies
- Galaxies: Quasars: General