Black Hole Mass and Eddington Ratio as Drivers for the Observable Properties of Radio-Loud and Radio-Quiet QSOs
Preprint
- 19 September 2001
Abstract
Recent studies of black holes in the nuclei of both active and normal galaxies have yielded relationships that permit a physical interpretation of the principal components of the spectra of QSOs. It is shown that principal component (or eigenvector) 1 (PC1) is driven predominantly by L/L{Edd}, and principal component 2 (PC2) is driven by luminosity or accretion rate. This results in a PC2 vs. PC1 diagram in which lines of constant black hole mass are diagonal. Using a sample consisting of the low-redshift PG objects supplemented by 46 radio-loud QSOs, it is shown that such a diagram effectively distinguishes radio-loud from radio-quiet as well as demonstrating that both narrow-line Seyfert 1s and broad absorption-line QSOs (BALQSOs) lie at the high L/LEdd} extreme, though these two types of objects are well separated in the PC2 direction. The very few radio-loud BALQSOs known fall in the region expected to be populated by such objects. Finally, a simple picture that ties together physical parameters and classification of AGN is presented.Keywords
All Related Versions
- Version 1, 2001-09-19, ArXiv
- Published version: The Astrophysical Journal, 565 (1), 78.
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