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The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: Rapid CIV Broad Absorption Line Variability

Authors :
Grier, C. J.
Hall, P. B.
Brandt, W. N.
Trump, J. R.
Shen, Yue
Vivek, M.
Ak, N. Filiz
Chen, Yuguang
Dawson, K. S.
Denney, K. D.
Green, Paul. J.
Jiang, Linhua
Kochanek, C. S.
McGreer, Ian D.
Pâris, I.
Peterson, B. M.
Schneider, D. P.
Tao, Charling
Wood-Vasey, W. M.
Bizyaev, Dmitry
Ge, Jian
Kinemuchi, Karen
Oravetz, Daniel
Pan, Kaike
Simmons, Audrey
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

We report the discovery of rapid variations of a high-velocity CIV broad absorption line trough in the quasar SDSS J141007.74+541203.3. This object was intensively observed in 2014 as a part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project, during which 32 epochs of spectroscopy were obtained with the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey spectrograph. We observe significant (>4sigma) variability in the equivalent width of the broad (~4000 km/s wide) CIV trough on rest-frame timescales as short as 1.20 days (~29 hours), the shortest broad absorption line variability timescale yet reported. The equivalent width varied by ~10% on these short timescales, and by about a factor of two over the duration of the campaign. We evaluate several potential causes of the variability, concluding that the most likely cause is a rapid response to changes in the incident ionizing continuum. If the outflow is at a radius where the recombination rate is higher than the ionization rate, the timescale of variability places a lower limit on the density of the absorbing gas of n_e > 3.9 x 10^5 cm^-3. The broad absorption line variability characteristics of this quasar are consistent with those observed in previous studies of quasars, indicating that such short-term variability may in fact be common and thus can be used to learn about outflow characteristics and contributions to quasar/host-galaxy feedback scenarios.<br />Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1503.03076
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/806/1/111