Free Access

Table 3

Interesting quasars with BELs in the Radial Velocity Spectrograph.

Quasar ID BEL Magnitude [mag] Dates of Spectra

1 SDSS 033706.22-004747.6 Hβ z = 17.0, GRVS = 16.3 2002-Nov.-30, 2000-Sep.-22, 2000-Dec.-06, 2000-Sep.-23, 2001-Oct.-18
2 SDSS 231324.45+003444.5 MgII z = 15.8, GRVS = 15.2 2000-Sep.-28, 2001-Sep.-24, 2000-Sep.-23
3 SDSS 000710.01+005329.1 Hα z = 16.3, GRVS = 15.4 2000-Sep.-05, 2002-Sep.-01
4 SDSS 172322.31+550414.1 Hα z = 17.0, GRVS = 16.6 2001-Mar.-28, 2000-Sep.-25
5 SDSS 155449.11+084204.8 Hβ z = 17.1, GRVS = 16.4 2011-May-24, 2004-May-11
6 SDSS 133649.11-002057.3 Hα z = 17.4, GRVS = 16.5 2000-Apr.-27, 2001-Feb.-14

7 HE2149-2745 MgII I = 16.29
8 LBQS1429-008 MgII H = 15.79

Notes. We list six interesting SDSS quasars with large measured variability, the multiply imaged quasar, and the binary quasar with BELs in Gaia’s RVS together with their relevant BEL, magnitudes, and dates of SDSS spectra (Schneider et al. 2010). The epochs, shown from left to right, represent the spectra from top to bottom.

Current usage metrics show cumulative count of Article Views (full-text article views including HTML views, PDF and ePub downloads, according to the available data) and Abstracts Views on Vision4Press platform.

Data correspond to usage on the plateform after 2015. The current usage metrics is available 48-96 hours after online publication and is updated daily on week days.

Initial download of the metrics may take a while.