Host Galaxies of Quasars


Collaborators:
John Bahcall and Sofia Kirhakos (Institute for Advanced Study)


Schneider, Bahcall, and Kirhakos have obtained Hubble Space Telescope images of 20 nearby, luminous quasars. The observations, through a very broad-band red filter, were designed to investigate the properties of the host galaxies of the quasar sample. There were a number of indications from ground-based work that radio-loud quasars resided in luminous elliptical galaxies and that radio-quiet quasars had luminous spiral hosts. The HST data reveal that luminous quasars live in a wide variety of environments: luminous ellipticals and spirals (but there is clearly not a one-to-one correspondence between quasar radio properties and host morphology), interacting galaxies, and a number of quasars who do not show any evidence of a host (detection limits for the hosts are L* or fainter).


Publications

HST Images of Nearby Quasars.
J.N. Bahcall, S. Kirhakos, and D.P. Schneider, ApJL, 435, 11 (1994)

HST Images of Nearby Quasars II. Results for Eight Quasars and Tests of the Detection Sensitivity.
J.N. Bahcall, S. Kirhakos, and D.P. Schneider, ApJ, in press (1995)

HST and MERLIN Observations of the Jet in 3C 273.
J.N. Bahcall, S. Kirhakos, D.P. Schneider, R.J. Davis, T.W.B. Muxlow, S.T. Garrington, R.G. Conway, and S.C. Unwin, ApJL, 452, 91 (1995)

PKS 2349$-$014: A Luminous Quasar with Thin Wisps, a Large Off-Center Nebulosity, and a Close Companion Galaxy.
J.N. Bahcall, S. Kirhakos, and D.P. Schneider, ApJL, 447, 1 (1995)

The Apparently Normal Galaxy Hosts for Two Luminous Quasars.
J.N. Bahcall, S. Kirhakos, and D.P. Schneider, ApJ, in press (1995)
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