Optical and UV properties of a radio-loud and a radio-quiet Population A quasar at high redshift

DOI: 
10.1002/asna.20210084
Publication date: 
01/01/2022
Main author: 
Deconto-Machado A.
IAA authors: 
Deconto-Machado, Alice;del Olmo, Ascensión;Perea, Jaime
Authors: 
Deconto-Machado, Alice;del Olmo, Ascensión;Marziani, Paola;Perea, Jaime;Stirpe, Giovanna
Journal: 
Astronomische Nachrichten
Publication type: 
Article
Volume: 
343.0
Pages: 
e210084
Number: 
e210084
Abstract: 
Different properties of quasars may be observed and analyzed through the many ranges of the electromagnetic spectrum. Pioneering studies showed that an “H-R diagram” for quasars was needed to organize these data, and that more than two dimensions were necessary: a four-dimensional Eigenvector (4DE1) parameter space was proposed. The 4DE1 makes use of independent observational properties obtained from the optical and UV emission lines, as well as from the soft-X rays. The 4DE1 “optical plane,” also known as the quasar Main Sequence (MS), identifies different spectral types in order to describe a consistent picture of QSOs. In this work, we present a spectroscopic analysis focused on the comparison between two sources, one radio-loud (PKS2000-330, (Formula presented.)) and one radio-quiet (Q1410+096, (Formula presented.)), both showing Population A quasar spectral properties. Optical spectra were observed in the infrared with VLT/ESO, and the additional measures in UV were obtained through the fitting of archive spectra. The analysis was performed through a nonlinear multicomponent decomposition of the emission line profiles. Results are shown in order to highlight the effects of the radio-loudness on their emission line properties. The two quasars share similar optical spectroscopic properties and are very close on the MS classification while presenting significant differences on the UV data. Both sources show significant blueshifts in the UV lines but important differences in their UV general behavior. While the radio-quiet source Q1410+096 shows a typical Pop A UV spectrum with similar intensities and shapes on both CIVλ1549 and SiIVλ1392, the UV spectrum of the strong radio-loud PKS2000-330 closely resembles the one of Population B of quasars.
Database: 
SCOPUS
ADS
URL: 
https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/#abs/2022AN....34310084D/abstract
ADS Bibcode: 
2022AN....34310084D
Keywords: 
high redshift | quasars | radio-loudness | spectroscopy