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Broad Absorption Line Disappearance on Multi-Year Timescales in a Large Quasar Sample

Authors :
Donald P. Schneider
Benjamin A. Weaver
Daniel Oravetz
Scott F. Anderson
D. Bizyaev
J. Brinkmann
Adam D. Myers
Patrick B. Hall
W. N. Brandt
Patrick Petitjean
Kaike Pan
N. Filiz Ak
Yue Shen
Donald G. York
Nicholas P. Ross
Britt Lundgren
Elena Malanushenko
Robert R. Gibson
A. Simmons
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
arXiv, 2012.

Abstract

We present 21 examples of CIV broad absorption line (BAL) trough disappearance in 19 quasars selected from systematic multi-epoch observations of 582 bright BAL quasars (1.9 < z < 4.5) by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-I/II (SDSS-I/II) and SDSS-III. The observations span 1.1-3.9 yr rest-frame timescales, longer than have been sampled in many previous BAL variability studies. On these timescales, approximate to 2.3% of C iv BAL troughs disappear and approximate to 3.3% of BAL quasars show a disappearing trough. These observed frequencies suggest that many CIV BAL absorbers spend on average at most a century along our line of sight to their quasar. Ten of the 19 BAL quasars showing C iv BAL disappearance have apparently transformed from BAL to non-BAL quasars; these are the first reported examples of such transformations. The BAL troughs that disappear tend to be those with small-to-moderate equivalent widths, relatively shallow depths, and high outflow velocities. Other non-disappearing CIV BALs in those nine objects having multiple troughs tend to weaken when one of them disappears, indicating a connection between the disappearing and non-disappearing troughs, even for velocity separations as large as 10,000-15,000 km s(-1). We discuss possible origins of this connection including disk-wind rotation and changes in shielding gas.<br />We present 21 examples of C IV broad absorption line (BAL) trough disappearance in 19 quasars selected from systematic multi-epoch observations of 582 bright BAL quasars (1.9 < z < 4.5) by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-I/II (SDSS-I/II) and SDSS-III. The observations span 1.1-3.9 yr rest-frame timescales, longer than have been sampled in many previous BAL variability studies. On these timescales, ≈2.3% of C IV BAL troughs disappear and ≈3.3% of BAL quasars show a disappearing trough. These observed frequencies suggest that many C IV BAL absorbers spend on average at most a century along our line of sight to their quasar. Ten of the 19 BAL quasars showing C IV BAL disappearance have apparently transformed from BAL to non-BAL quasars; these are the first reported examples of such transformations. The BAL troughs that disappear tend to be those with small-to-moderate equivalent widths, relatively shallow depths, and high outflow velocities. Other non-disappearing C IV BALs in those nine objects having multiple troughs tend to weaken when one of them disappears, indicating a connection between the disappearing and non-disappearing troughs, even for velocity separations as large as 10,000-15,000 km s-1. We discuss possible origins of this connection including disk-wind rotation and changes in shielding gas.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....41372adc9aefea9166bb732e02788add
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1208.0836