- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/618/A144
- Title:
- QSO candidates catalog with APOP & ALLWISE (QCC)
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/618/A144
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Quasars are spatially stationary, and they are essential objects in astrometry when defining reference frames. However, the census of quasars is far from complete. Mid-infared colors can be used to find quasar candidates because AGNs show a peculiar appearance in mid-infrared color, but these methods are incapable of separating quasars from AGNs.The aim of our study is to use astrometric and mid-infrared methods to select quasars and get a reliable quasar candidates catalog. We used a near-zero proper motion criterion in conjuction with WISE (all-sky Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer) [W1-W2] color to select quasar candidates. The [W1-W2] color criterion is defined by the linear boundary of two samples: LAMOST DR5 quasars, which serve as the quasar sample, and LAMOST DR5 stars/galaxies, which serve as the non-quasar sample. The contamination and completeness are evaluated. We present a catalog of 662753 quasar candidates, with a completeness of about 75% and a reliability of 77.2%.
Number of results to display per page
Search Results
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/356/331
- Title:
- QSO-candidates in OGLE-II Galactic bulge fields
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/356/331
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present 97 QSO candidates in 48 Galactic bulge fields of the Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment II (OGLE-II) covering ~11deg^2^, which are selected via their variability. We extend light curves of variable objects which were detected in a 3-yr baseline in the OGLE-II variable star catalogue to fourth year. We search for objects that are faint (16<I_0_<18.5) and slowly variable over 4-yr in this catalogue by using the variogram/structure function. Finding the QSOs in such stellar-crowded and high extinction fields is challenging, but should be useful for the astrometric reference frame. Spectroscopic follow-up observations are required to confirm these QSO candidates. Follow-up observations are being prepared for four of these fields (BUL_SC1, 2, 32 and 45). Follow-up observations for other fields are strongly encouraged. The complete list and light curves of all 97 candidates are available in electronic format at http://www.astro.princeton.edu/sumi/QSO-OGLEII/ .
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/747/107
- Title:
- QSO Candidates in the MACHO LMC database
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/747/107
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a catalog the 2566 QSO candidates in the MACHO LMC database. In these catalogs, we complied number of properties of the objects including RA, Dec, crossmatched IDs with several catalogs, magnitudes, photometric redshifts, etc. See Kim et al. (2011ApJ...735...68K) for the SVM (a.k.a. Support Vector Machine, a supervised machine learning algorithm) QSO classification model based on the time variability of lightcurves. We used the model to select the 2566 QSO candidates. In this work, we employed multiple diagnostics such as X-ray flux, mid-IR color and AGN SED fitting in order to select 663 promising QSO candidates among the 2,566 candidates. These candidates are flagged in the catalog. We calibrated the MACHO RA and Dec of the candidates using the UCAC3 catalog and improved the average astrometric accuracy from ~3" to ~0.5".
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/396/223
- Title:
- QSO candidates selection in VO era
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/396/223
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a method for the photometric selection of candidate quasars in multiband surveys. The method makes use of a priori knowledge derived from a subsample of spectroscopic confirmed quasi-stellar objects (QSOs) to map the parameter space. The disentanglement of QSOs candidates and stars is performed in the colour space through the combined use of two algorithms, the probabilistic principal surfaces and the negative entropy clustering, which are for the first time used in an astronomical context. Both methods have been implemented in the voneural package on the Astrogrid Virtual Observatory platform. Even though they belong to the class of the unsupervised clustering tools, the performances of the method are optimized by using the available sample of confirmed quasars and it is therefore possible to learn from any improvement in the available 'base of knowledge'. The method has been applied and tested on both optical and optical plus near-infrared data extracted from the visible Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and infrared United Kingdom Infrared Deep Sky Survey-Large Area Survey public data bases. In all cases, the experiments lead to high values of both efficiency and completeness, comparable if not better than the methods already known in the literature. A catalogue of optical candidate QSOs extracted from the SDSS Data Release 7 Legacy photometric data set has been produced.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/606/A13
- Title:
- QSO eHAQ0111+0641 spectra
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/606/A13
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- It is important to understand the selection effects behind the quasar samples to fully exploit the potential of quasars as probes of cosmic chemical evolution and the internal gas dynamics of galaxies; in particular, it is vital to understand whether the selection criteria exclude foreground galaxies with certain properties, most importantly a high dust content. Here we present spectroscopic follow-up from the 10.4m GTC telescope of a dust-reddened quasar, eHAQ0111+0641, from the extended High AV Quasar (HAQ) survey. We find that the z=3.21 quasar has a foreground damped Lyman-{alpha} absorber (DLA) at z=2.027 along the line of sight. The DLA has very strong metal lines due to a moderately high metallicity with an inferred lower limit of 25% of the solar metallicity, but a very large gas column density along the line of sight in its host galaxy. This discovery is further evidence that there is a dust bias affecting the census of metals, caused by the combined effect of dust obscuration and reddening, in existing samples of z>2 DLAs. The case of eHAQ0111+0641 illustrates that dust bias is not only caused by dust obscuration, but also dust reddening.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/447/3856
- Title:
- QSO-galaxy pairs from SDSS
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/447/3856
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present photometric and spectroscopic measurements of 53 QSO-galaxy pairs from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), where nebular emission lines from a 0<z<0.84 foreground galaxy are detected in the fibre spectra of a background QSO, bringing the overall sample to 103 QSO-galaxy pairs detected in the SDSS. We here study the nature of these systems. Detected foreground galaxies appear at impact parameters between 0.37 and 12.68 kpc. The presence of oxygen and Balmer emission lines allows us to determine the emission line metallicities for our sample, which are on average supersolar in value. Star formation rates for our sample are in the range 0.01-12M_{sun}_/yr. We utilize photometric redshift fitting techniques to estimate the M* values of our galaxies (logM*=7.34-11.54), and extrapolate this relationship to those galaxies with no imaging detections. Where available, we measure the absorption features present in the QSO spectrum due to the foreground galaxy and the relationships between their rest equivalent widths. We report an anticorrelation between impact parameter and E(B-V)(g-i), as well as a correlation between galaxy colour (u- r) and E(B-V)(g-i). We find that our sample is one of late-type, star-forming galaxies comparable to field galaxies in a similar redshift range, providing important clues to better understand absorption systems. These galaxies represent a sample of typical galaxies in the local Universe for which abundances, extinction, morphology, and absorption properties may be measured using background QSOs with great potential for follow-up observations.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/635/A157
- Title:
- QSO J1538+0855 MUSE datacube
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/635/A157
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- In recent years, Ly{alpha} nebulae have been routinely detected around high redshift, radio-quiet quasars thanks to the advent of the highly sensitive integral field spectrographs. Constraining the physical properties of the Ly{alpha} nebulae is crucial for a full understanding of the circum-galactic medium (CGM). The CGM acts both as a repository for intergalactic and galactic baryons as well as a venue of feeding and feedback processes. The most luminous quasars are privileged test-beds to study these processes, given their large ionising fluxes and dense CGM environments in which they are expected to be embedded.We aim to characterise the rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) emission lines in the CGM around a hyper-luminous, broad emission line, radio-quiet quasar at z~3.6, which exhibits powerful outflows at both nuclear and host galaxy scales.We analyse VLT/MUSE observations of the quasar J1538+08 (Lbol=6*10^47^erg/s), and we performed a search for extended UV emission lines to characterise its morphology, emissivity, kinematics, and metal content.We report the discovery of a very luminous (2*10^44^erg/s), giant (150kpc) Ly{alpha} nebula and a likely associated extended (75kpc) CIV nebula. The Ly{alpha} nebula emission exhibits moderate blueshift (440km/s) compared to the quasar systemic redshift and a large average velocity dispersion (700km/s) across the nebula, while the CIV nebula shows average velocity dispersion of 350km/s. The Ly{alpha} line profile exhibits a significant asymmetry towards negative velocity values at 20-30kpc south of the quasar and is well parametrised by the following two Gaussian components: a narrow (470km/s) systemic one plus a broad (1200km/s), blueshifted (1500km/s) one. Our analysis of the MUSE observation of J1538+08 reveals metal-enriched CGM around this hyper-luminous quasar. Furthermore, our detection of blueshifted emission in the emission profile of the Ly{alpha} nebula suggests that powerful nuclear outflows can propagate through the CGM over tens of kiloparsecs.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/657/A113
- Title:
- QSO J1721+8842 spectra
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/657/A113
- Date:
- 22 Feb 2022
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- High-redshift binary quasars provide key insights into mergers and quasar activity, and are useful tools for probing the spatial kinematics and chemistry of galaxies along the line-of-sight. However, only three sub-10-kpc binaries have been confirmed above z=1. Gravitational lensing would provide a way to easily resolve such binaries, study them in higher resolution, and provide more sightlines, though the required alignment with a massive foreground galaxy is rare. Through image deconvolution of StanCam Nordic Optical Telescope (NOT) monitoring data, we reveal two further point sources in the known, z~2.38, quadruply lensed quasar (quad), J1721+8842. An ALFOSC/NOT long-slit spectrum shows that the brighter of these two sources is a quasar with z=2.369+/-0.007 based on the CIII] line, while the CIII] redshift of the quad is z=2.364+/-0.003. Lens modelling using point source positions rules out a single source model, favouring an isothermal lens mass profile with two quasar sources separated by ~6.0kpc (0.73") in projection. Given the resolving ability from lensing and current lensed quasar statistics, this discovery suggests a large population of undiscovered, unlensed sub-10-kpc binaries. We also analyse spectra of two images of the quad, showing narrow Ly{alpha} emission within the trough of a proximate damped Lyman-{alpha} absorber (PDLA). An apparent mismatch between the continuum and narrow line flux ratios provides a new potential tool for simultaneously studying microlensing and the quasar host galaxy. Signs of the PDLA are also seen in the second source, however a deeper spectrum is still required to confirm this. Thanks to the multiple lines-of-sight from lensing and two quasar sources, this system offers simultaneous sub-parsec and kpc-scale probes of a PDLA.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/508/200
- Title:
- QSO low-z Ly{alpha} absorbers
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/508/200
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- To study the nature of low-z Ly{alpha} absorbers in the spectra of QSOs, we have obtained high signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) UV spectra of H1821+643 (z_em_=0.297) and PG 1116+215 (z_em_=0.177) with the Goddard High-Resolution Spectrograph on the Hubble Space Telescope.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/710/1498
- Title:
- QSO luminosity function at z~4
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/710/1498
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The evolution of the quasar luminosity function (QLF) is one of the basic cosmological measures providing insight into structure formation and mass assembly in the universe. We have conducted a spectroscopic survey to find faint quasars (-26.0<M_1450_<-22.0) at redshifts z=3.8-5.2 in order to measure the faint end of the QLF at these early times. Using available optical imaging data from portions of the NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey and the Deep Lens Survey, we have color-selected quasar candidates in a total area of 3.76deg^2^. Thirty candidates have R<=23mag. We conducted spectroscopic follow-up for 28 of our candidates and found 23 QSOs, 21 of which are reported here for the first time, in the 3.74<z<5.06 redshift range.