Discovery of the Most-Distant Double-Peaked Emitter at z=1.369
B. Luo, W. N. Brandt, J. D. Silverman, I. V. Strateva, F. E. Bauer, P., Capak, J. Kartaltepe, B. D. Lehmer, V. Mainieri, M. Salvato, G. Szokoly, D., P. Schneider, C. Vignali

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of the most distant double-peaked emitter at z=1.369, characterized by a broad Mg II emission line modeled by a relativistic disk, with multiwavelength data supporting external illumination of the accretion disk.
Contribution
First identification of a high-redshift double-peaked emitter with detailed spectral modeling and multiwavelength analysis.
Findings
Double-peaked Mg II emission line at z=1.369
X-ray spectrum consistent with typical radio-loud quasars
External illumination likely powers the emission lines
Abstract
We report the discovery of the most-distant double-peaked emitter, CXOECDFS J033115.0-275518, at z=1.369. A Keck/DEIMOS spectrum shows a clearly double-peaked broad Mg II emission line, with FWHM 11000 km/s for the line complex. The line profile can be well fit by an elliptical relativistic Keplerian disk model. This is one of a handful of double-peaked emitters known to be a luminous quasar, with excellent multiwavelength coverage and a high-quality X-ray spectrum. CXOECDFS J033115.0-275518 is a radio-loud quasar with two radio lobes (FR II morphology) and a radio loudness of f_{5 GHz}/f_{4400 \AA}~429. The X-ray spectrum can be modeled by a power law with photon index 1.72 and no intrinsic absorption; the rest-frame 0.5-8.0 keV luminosity is erg/s. The spectral energy distribution (SED) of CXOECDFS J033115.0-275518 has a shape typical for radio-loud…
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