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Colors of 2625 Quasars at 0 < z < 5 Measured in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Photometric System

Authors :
Richards, Gordon T.
Fan, Xiaohui
Schneider, Donald P.
Vanden Berk, Daniel E.
Strauss, Michael A.
York, Donald G.
Anderson, Jr., John E.
Anderson, Scott F.
Annis, James
Bahcall, Neta A.
Bernardi, Mariangela
Briggs, John W.
Brinkmann, J.
Brunner, Robert
Burles, Scott
Carey, Larry
Castander, Francisco J.
Connolly, A. J.
Crocker, J. H.
Csabai, István
Doi, Mamoru
Finkbeiner, Douglas
Friedman, Scott D.
Frieman, Joshua A.
Fukugita, Masataka
Gunn, James E.
Hindsley, Robert B.
Ivezic, Zeljko
Kent, Stephen
Knapp, G. R.
Lamb, D. Q.
Leger, R. French
Long, Daniel C.
Loveday, Jon
Lupton, Robert H.
McKay, Timothy A.
Meiksin, Avery
Merrelli, Aronne
Munn, Jeffrey A.
Newberg, Heidi Jo
Newcomb, Matt
Nichol, R. C.
Owen, Russell
Pier, Jeffrey R.
Pope, Adrian
Richmond, Michael W.
Rockosi, Constance M.
Schlegel, David J.
Siegmund, Walter A.
Smee, Stephen
Snir, Yehuda
Stoughton, Chris
Stubbs, Christopher William
SubbaRao, Mark
Szalay, Alexander S.
Szokoly, Gyula P.
Tremonti, Christy
Uomoto, Alan
Waddell, Patrick
Yanny, Brian
Zheng, Wei
Source :
Quick submit: 2017-05-17T09:32:21-0400, Richards, Gordon T., Xiaohui Fan, Donald P. Schneider, Daniel E. Vanden Berk, Michael A. Strauss, Donald G. York, John E. Anderson, Jr., et al. 2001. “Colors of 2625 Quasars at 0 < z < 5 Measured in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Photometric System.” The Astronomical Journal 121 (5) (May): 2308–2330. doi:10.1086/320392.
Publication Year :
2001
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2001.

Abstract

We present an empirical investigation of the colors of quasars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) photometric system. The sample studied includes 2625 quasars with SDSS photometry: 1759 quasars found during SDSS spectroscopic commissioning and SDSS follow-up observations on other telescopes, 50 matches to FIRST quasars, 573 matches to quasars from the NASA Extragalactic Database, and 243 quasars from two or more of these sources. The quasars are distributed in a 2fdg5 wide stripe centered on the celestial equator covering ~529 deg2. Positions (accurate to 0farcs2) and SDSS magnitudes are given for the 898 quasars known prior to SDSS spectroscopic commissioning. New SDSS quasars, which range in brightness from i* = 15.39 to the photometric magnitude limit of the survey, represent an increase of over 200% in the number of known quasars in this area of the sky. The ensemble average of the observed colors of quasars in the SDSS passbands are well represented by a power-law continuum with αν = -0.5 (fν ∝ να) and are close to those predicted by previous simulations. However, the contributions of the &quot;small blue (or λ3000) bump&quot; and other strong emission lines have a significant effect upon the colors. The color-redshift relation exhibits considerable structure, which may be of use in determining photometric redshifts for quasars from their colors alone. The range of colors at a given redshift can generally be accounted for by a range in the optical spectral index with a distribution αν = -0.5 &#177; 0.65 (95% confidence), but there is a red tail in the distribution. This tail may be a sign of internal reddening, especially since fainter objects at a given redshift tend to exhibit redder colors than the average. Finally, we show that there is a continuum of properties between quasars and Seyfert galaxies, and we test the validity of the traditional dividing line (MB = -23) between the two classes of active galactic nuclei.&lt;br /&gt;Astronomy

Subjects

Subjects :
catalogs
quasars: general
surveys

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00046256
Database :
Digital Access to Scholarship at Harvard (DASH)
Journal :
Quick submit: 2017-05-17T09:32:21-0400, Richards, Gordon T., Xiaohui Fan, Donald P. Schneider, Daniel E. Vanden Berk, Michael A. Strauss, Donald G. York, John E. Anderson, Jr., et al. 2001. “Colors of 2625 Quasars at 0 < z < 5 Measured in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Photometric System.” The Astronomical Journal 121 (5) (May): 2308–2330. doi:10.1086/320392.
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edshld.1.33461994
Document Type :
Journal Article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1086/320392