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Mapping the Inner Structure of Quasars with Time-Domain Spectroscopy

Authors :
Shen, Yue
Anderson, Scott
Berger, Edo
Brandt, W. N.
De Rosa, Gisella
Fan, Xiaohui
Ferrarese, Laura
Gezari, Suvi
Graham, Matthew
Greene, Jenny
Grier, Catherine J.
Grindlay, Josh
Haggard, Daryl
Hall, Patrick B.
Ho, Luis
Medel, Hector Ibarra
Ilic, Dragana
Ivezic, Zeljko
Jencson, Jacob
Jiang, Linhua
Juneau, Stéphanie
Kasliwal, Mansi
Kollmeier, Juna
Kutyrev, Alexander
Li, Jennifer I-Hsiu
Liu, Guilin
Liu, Xin
MacLeod, Chelsea
Melnick, Gary
Metzger, Brian
Myers, Adam D.
O'Dea, Christopher
Petric, Andreea
Popović, Luka Č.
Prakash, Abhishek
Purcell, Bill
Richards, Gordon T.
Rieke, George
Tanvir, Nial
Trakhtenbrot, Benny
Wood-Vasey, Michael
Xue, Yongquan
Yang, Qian
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The ubiquitous variability of quasars across a wide range of wavelengths and timescales encodes critical information about the structure and dynamics of the circumnuclear emitting regions that are too small to be directly resolved, as well as detailed underlying physics of accretion and feedback processes in these active supermassive black holes. We emphasize the importance of studying quasar variability with time-domain spectroscopy, focusing on two science cases: (1) reverberation mapping (RM) to measure the broad-line region sizes and black hole masses in distant quasars; (2) spectroscopic follow-up of extreme variability quasars that dramatically change their continuum and broad-line flux within several years. We highlight the need for dedicated optical-infrared spectroscopic survey facilities in the coming decades to accompany wide-area time-domain imaging surveys, including: (1) the next phase of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-V; ~2020-2025), an all-sky, time-domain multi-object spectroscopic survey with 2.5m-class telescopes; (2) the planned Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer, a dedicated 10m-class spectroscopic survey telescope with a 1.5 sq. deg field-of-view and multiplex of thousands of fibers in both optical and near-IR (J+H) to begin operations in 2029; (3) the Time-domain Spectroscopic Observatory (TSO), a proposed Probe-class ~1.3m telescope at L2, with imaging and spectroscopy (R=200, 1800) in 4 bands (0.3 - 5 micron) and rapid slew capability to 90% of sky, which will extend the coverage of Hbeta to z=8.<br />Comment: Science White Paper for the US Astro 2020 Decadal Survey

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1903.04533
Document Type :
Working Paper