Continuum and Emission-Line Properties of Broad Absorption Line Quasars
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 1 December 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Astronomical Society in The Astronomical Journal
- Vol. 126 (6) , 2594-2607
- https://doi.org/10.1086/379293
Abstract
We investigate the continuum and emission-line properties of 224 broad absorption line quasars (BALQSOs) with 0.9 z 4.4 drawn from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Early Data Release, which contains 3814 bona fide quasars. We find that low-ionization BALQSOs (LoBALs) are significantly reddened as compared with normal quasars, in agreement with previous work. High-ionization BALQSOs (HiBALs) are also more reddened than the average non-BALQSO. Assuming SMC-like dust reddening at the quasar redshift, the amount of reddening needed to explain HiBALs is E(B-V) ~ 0.023 and LoBALs is E(B-V) ~ 0.077 (compared with the ensemble average of the entire quasar sample). We find that there are differences in the emission-line properties between the average HiBAL, LoBAL, and non-BAL quasar. These differences, along with differences in the absorption-line troughs, may be related to intrinsic quasar properties such as the slope of the intrinsic (unreddened) continuum; more extreme absorption properties are correlated with bluer intrinsic continua. Despite the differences among BALQSO subtypes and non-BALQSOs, BALQSOs appear to be drawn from the same parent population as non-BALQSOs when both are selected by their UV/optical properties. We find that the overall fraction of traditionally defined BALQSOs, after correcting for color-dependent selection effects due to different SEDs of BALQSOs and non-BALQSOs, is 13.4% ± 1.2% and shows no significant redshift dependence for 1.7 ≤ z ≤ 3.45. After a rough completeness correction for the effects of dust extinction, we find that approximately one in every six quasars is a BALQSO.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- An Efficient Targeting Strategy for Multiobject Spectrograph Surveys: the Sloan Digital Sky Survey “Tiling” AlgorithmThe Astronomical Journal, 2003
- Black Hole Mass and Eddington Ratio as Drivers for the Observable Properties of Radio‐loud and Radio‐quiet QSOsThe Astrophysical Journal, 2002
- The FIRST Bright Quasar Survey. III. The South Galactic CapThe Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series, 2001
- Composite Spectra from the FIRST Bright Quasar SurveyThe Astrophysical Journal, 2001
- A Structure for QuasarsThe Astrophysical Journal, 2000
- Properties of Radio‐selected Broad Absorption Line Quasars from the First Bright Quasar SurveyThe Astrophysical Journal, 2000
- The FIRST Radio-loud Broad Absorption Line QSO and Evidence for a Hidden Population of QuasarsThe Astrophysical Journal, 1997
- The ``Ghost of LY alpha '' as Evidence for Radiative Acceleration in QuasarsThe Astrophysical Journal, 1996
- The optical properties of IR-selected and MG II broad absorption line quasarsThe Astrophysical Journal, 1992
- New results on quasars emission-line redshift differencesThe Astrophysical Journal, 1990