Issue |
A&A
Volume 650, June 2021
|
|
---|---|---|
Article Number | A33 | |
Number of page(s) | 12 | |
Section | Extragalactic astronomy | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202140597 | |
Published online | 03 June 2021 |
A systematic search for changing-look quasars in SDSS-II using difference spectra
Department of Physics, University of Bath, Claverton Down, Bath BA2 7AY, UK
e-mail: c.villforth@bath.ac.uk
Received:
17
February
2021
Accepted:
16
April
2021
Context. ‘Changing-look quasars’ (CLQs) are active galactic nuclei (AGN) showing extreme variability that results in a transition from type 1 to type 2 AGN. The short timescales of these transitions present a challenge to the unified model of AGN and the physical processes causing these transitions remain poorly understood. CLQs also provide interesting samples for the study of AGN host galaxies since the central emission disappears almost entirely.
Aims. Previous searches for CLQs have utilised photometric variability or SDSS classification changes to systematically identify CLQs; this approach may miss lower luminosity CLQs. In this paper, we aim to use spectroscopic data to asses if analysis difference spectra can be used to detect further CLQs that have been missed by photometric searches.
Methods. We searched SDSS-II DR 7 repeat spectra for sources that exhibit either a disappearance or appearance of both broad line emission and accretion disc continuum emission by directly analysing the difference spectrum between two epochs of observation.
Results. From a sample of 24 782 objects with difference spectra, our search yielded six CLQs within the redshift range 0.1 ⩽ z ≤ 0.3, including four newly identified sources. Spectral analysis indicates that changes in the accretion rate can explain the changing-look behaviour. While a change in dust extinction fits the changes in the spectral shape, the timescales of the changes observed are too short for obscuration from torus clouds.
Conclusions. Using difference spectra was shown to be an effective and sensitive way to detect CLQs. We recover CLQs an order of magnitude lower in luminosities than those found by photometric searches and achieve higher completeness than spectroscopic searches relying on pipeline classification.
Key words: galaxies: active / accretion / accretion disks
© ESO 2021
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