Environments of strong/ultrastrong, ultraviolet Fe II emitting quasars
Author
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Clowes, Roger G.
Author
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Raghunathan, Srinivasan
es_CL
Author
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Söchting, Ilona K.
es_CL
Author
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Graham, Matthew J.
es_CL
Author
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Campusano Brown, Luis
es_CL
Admission date
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2014-01-27T19:09:54Z
Available date
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2014-01-27T19:09:54Z
Publication date
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2013-06
Cita de ítem
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MNRAS 433, 2467–2475 (2013)
en_US
Identifier
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DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stt915
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/126296
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
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Abstract
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We have investigated the strength of ultraviolet (UV) Fe II emission from quasars within
the environments of large quasar groups (LQGs) in comparison with quasars elsewhere, for
1.1 ≤ ¯zLQG ≤ 1.7, using the DR7QSO catalogue of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. We use the
Weymann et al. W2400 equivalent width, defined between the rest-frame continuum windows
2240–2255 and 2665–2695 Å, as the measure of the UV Fe II emission. We find a significant
shift of the W2400 distribution to higher values for quasars within LQGs, predominantly for
those LQGs with 1.1 ≤ ¯zLQG ≤ 1.5. There is a tentative indication that the shift to higher
values increases with the quasar i magnitude. We find evidence that within LQGs the ultrastrong
emitters with W2400 ≥ 45Å (more precisely, ultrastrong plus with W2400 ≥ 44 Å)
have preferred nearest-neighbour separations of ∼30–50 Mpc to the adjacent quasar of any
W2400 strength. No such effect is seen for the ultrastrong emitters that are not in LQGs. The
possibilities for increasing the strength of the Fe II emission appear to be iron abundance, Lyα
fluorescence and microturbulence, and probably all of these operate. The dense environment
of the LQGs may have led to an increased rate of star formation and an enhanced abundance
of iron in the nuclei of galaxies. Similarly, the dense environment may have led to more active
blackholes and increased Lyα fluorescence. The preferred nearest-neighbour separation for the
stronger emitters would appear to suggest a dynamical component, such as microturbulence.
In one particular LQG, the Huge-LQG (the largest structure known in the early Universe),
six of the seven strongest emitters very obviously form three pairings within the total of 73
members.
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Patrocinador
dc.description.sponsorship
LEC received partial support from the Center of Excellence in
Astrophysics and Associated Technologies (PFB 06) and from a
CONICYT Anillo project (ACT 1122).
SR is in receipt of a CONICYT PhD studentship.