Quasar bolometric corrections: theoretical considerations
Rodrigo S. Nemmen, Michael S. Brotherton

TL;DR
This paper investigates theoretical models of quasar accretion discs to refine bolometric correction estimates, highlighting the impact of viewing angles and anisotropic emission on luminosity calculations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of bolometric corrections based on accretion disc models, accounting for relativistic effects and viewing angles, and quantifies systematic errors from isotropic assumptions.
Findings
Bolometric correction follows a nonlinear relation with B<=0.9.
Correction at 3000A wavelength: A=9.24, B=0.81.
Isotropic emission assumption can overestimate luminosity by ~30%.
Abstract
Bolometric corrections based on the optical-to-ultraviolet continuum spectrum of quasars are widely used to quantify their radiative output, although such estimates are affected by a myriad of uncertainties, such as the generally unknown line-of-sight angle to the central engine. In order to shed light on these issues, we investigate the state-of-the-art models of Hubeny et al. that describe the continuum spectrum of thin accretion discs and include relativistic effects. We explore the bolometric corrections as a function of mass accretion rates, black hole masses and viewing angles, restricted to the parameter space expected for type-1 quasars. We find that a nonlinear relationship log L_bol=A + B log(lambda L_lambda) with B<=0.9 is favoured by the models and becomes tighter as the wavelength decreases. We calculate from the model the bolometric corrections corresponding to the…
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