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VARIABILITY-BASED ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEUS SELECTION USING IMAGE SUBTRACTION IN THE SDSS AND LSST ERA

Authors :
Andrew C. Becker
Robert R. Gibson
John J. Ruan
Andrew J. Connolly
Scott F. Anderson
Yumi Choi
Chelsea L. MacLeod
Željko Ivezić
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal. 782:37
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2014.

Abstract

With upcoming all sky surveys such as LSST poised to generate a deep digital movie of the optical sky, variability-based AGN selection will enable the construction of highly-complete catalogs with minimum contamination. In this study, we generate $g$-band difference images and construct light curves for QSO/AGN candidates listed in SDSS Stripe 82 public catalogs compiled from different methods, including spectroscopy, optical colors, variability, and X-ray detection. Image differencing excels at identifying variable sources embedded in complex or blended emission regions such as Type II AGNs and other low-luminosity AGNs that may be omitted from traditional photometric or spectroscopic catalogs. To separate QSOs/AGNs from other sources using our difference image light curves, we explore several light curve statistics and parameterize optical variability by the characteristic damping timescale ($\tau$) and variability amplitude. By virtue of distinguishable variability parameters of AGNs, we are able to select them with high completeness of 93.4% and efficiency (i.e., purity) of 71.3%. Based on optical variability, we also select highly variable blazar candidates, whose infrared colors are consistent with known blazars. One third of them are also radio detected. With the X-ray selected AGN candidates, we probe the optical variability of X-ray detected optically-extended sources using their difference image light curves for the first time. A combination of optical variability and X-ray detection enables us to select various types of host-dominated AGNs. Contrary to the AGN unification model prediction, two Type II AGN candidates (out of 6) show detectable variability on long-term timescales like typical Type I AGNs. This study will provide a baseline for future optical variability studies of extended sources.

Details

ISSN :
15384357 and 0004637X
Volume :
782
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f66e5121198fd47c6449119987305b7a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637x/782/1/37