Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics – Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics
Scientific paper
2010-07-19
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics
7 Tables, 5 Figures; accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Scientific paper
[Abridged] We compare broad emission line profiles and estimate line ratios for all major emission lines between Ly-alpha and H-beta in a sample of six quasars. The sources were chosen with two criteria in mind: the existence of high quality optical and UV spectra as well as the possibility to sample the spectroscopic diversity in the 4D Eigenvector 1 context . In the latter sense each source occupies a region (bin) in the FWHM(H-beta) vs. optical FeII strength plane that is significantly different from the others. High S/N H-beta emission line profiles are used as templates for modeling the other lines (Ly-alpha, CIV 1549, HeII 1640, Al III 1860, Si III] 1892, and Mg II 2800). We can adequately model all broad lines assuming the existence of three components distinguished by blueshifted, unshifted and redshifted centroids (indicated as blue, broad and very broad component respectively). The broad component (high electron density, low ionization parameter; high column density) is present in almost all type-1 quasars and therefore corresponds most closely to the classical broad line emitting region (the reverberating component). The blue component emission (lower electron density; high ionization; low column density) arises in less optically thick gas; it is often thought to arise in an accretion disk wind. The least understood component involves the very broad component (high ionization and large column density). It is perhaps the most distinguishing characteristic of quasars with FWHM H-beta > 4000 km/s that belong to the so-called Population B of our 4DE1 space. Population A quasars (FWHM H-beta < 4000 km/s) are dominated by broad component emission in H-beta and blue component emission in CIV 1549 and other high ionization lines. 4DE1 appears to be the most useful current context for revealing and unifying spectral diversity in type-1 quasars.
Bachev Rumen
Dultzin Deborah
Marziani Paola
Negrete Alenka C.
Sulentic Jack W.
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