Probing the Origins of the CIV and Fe Kalpha Baldwin Effect
Jian Wu, Daniel E. Vanden Berk, W.N.Brandt, Donald Schneider, Robert, Gibson, Jianfeng Wu

TL;DR
This study investigates the CIV Baldwin Effect in AGNs, revealing that X-ray to UV brightness ratio significantly influences CIV emission line variability, with implications for understanding AGN emission regions.
Contribution
It demonstrates that alpha_ox and UV luminosity jointly better explain CIV EW variations, highlighting the role of soft X-ray emission in the Baldwin Effect.
Findings
CIV EW correlates with alpha_ox and luminosity.
Variability accounts for over 60% of EW scatter.
Narrow Fe Kalpha lines show similar Baldwin Effect but are independent of alpha_ox.
Abstract
We use UV/optical and X-ray observations of 272 radio-quiet Type 1 AGNs and quasars to investigate the CIV Baldwin Effect (BEff). The UV/optical spectra are drawn from the Hubble Space Telescope, International Ultraviolet Explorer and Sloan Digital Sky Survey archives. The X-ray spectra are from the Chandra and XMM-Newton archives. We apply correlation and partial-correlation analyses to the equivalent widths, continuum monochromatic luminosities, and alpha_ox, which characterizes the relative X-ray to UV brightness. The equivalent width of the CIV 1549 emission line is correlated with both alpha_ox and luminosity. We find that by regressing l_UV with EW(CIV) and alpha_ox, we can obtain tighter correlations than by regressing l_UV with only EW(CIV). Both correlation and regression analyses imply that l_UV is not the only factor controlling the changes of EW(CIV); alpha_ox (or,…
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