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A quasar shedding its dust cocoon at redshift 2

Authors :
Weimin Yi
W. N. Brandt
Q. Ni
Luis C. Ho
Bin Luo
Wei Yan
D. P. Schneider
Jeremiah D. Paul
Richard M. Plotkin
Jinyi Yang
Feige Wang
Zhicheng He
Chen Chen
Xue-Bing Wu
Jin-Ming Bai
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
arXiv, 2022.

Abstract

We present the first near-IR spectroscopy and joint analyses of multi-wavelength observations for SDSS J082747.14+425241.1, a dust-reddened, weak broad emission-line quasar (WLQ) undergoing a remarkable broad absorption line (BAL) transformation. The systemic redshift is more precisely measured to be $z=2.070\pm0.001$ using H$\beta$ compared to $z=2.040\pm0.003$ using \mgii\ from the literature, signifying an extreme \mgii\ blueshift of $2140\pm530$ \kms\ relative to H$\beta$. Using the H$\beta$-based single-epoch scaling relation with a systematic uncertainty of 0.3 dex, its black hole (BH) mass and Eddington ratio are estimated to be $M_{\rm BH}\sim6.1\times10^8M_\odot$ and $\lambda_{\rm Edd}\sim0.71$, indicative of being in a rapidly accreting phase. Our investigations confirm the WLQ nature and the LoBAL$\rightarrow$HiBAL transformation, along with a factor of 2 increase in the \mgii+\feii\ emission strength and a decrease of 0.1 in $E(B-V)$ over two decades. The kinetic power of this LoBAL wind at $R\sim$15 pc from its BH is estimated to be $\sim$43\% of the Eddington luminosity, sufficient for quasar feedback upon its host galaxy albeit with an order-of-magnitude uncertainty. This quasar provides a clear example of the long-sought scenario where LoBAL quasars are surrounded by dust cocoons, and wide-angle nuclear winds play a key role in the transition for red quasars evolving into the commonly seen blue quasars.<br />Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0494f6c18de690568ac6b0087661758e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2203.07570