Variability in quasar broad absorption line outflows II. Multi-epoch monitoring of SiIV and CIV BAL variability
Daniel M. Capellupo, Fred Hamann, Joseph C. Shields, Paola Rodr\'iguez, Hidalgo, Tom A. Barlow

TL;DR
This study monitors quasar broad absorption line variability over multiple epochs, revealing that SiIV lines vary more frequently than CIV lines, with variability likely caused by changing ionization or cloud movements, on timescales less than a few years.
Contribution
It provides a detailed multi-epoch analysis of BAL variability in quasars, comparing SiIV and CIV lines, and discusses potential physical mechanisms behind the observed changes.
Findings
SiIV BALs are more variable than CIV BALs.
Approximately 50% of variable SiIV regions lack corresponding CIV variability.
BAL variations occur on timescales less than a few years.
Abstract
Broad absorption lines (BALs) in quasar spectra indicate high-velocity outflows that may be present in all quasars and could be an important contributor to feedback to their host galaxies. Variability studies of BALs help illuminate the structure, evolution, and basic physical properties of the outflows. Here we present further results from an ongoing BAL monitoring campaign of a sample of 24 luminous quasars at redshifts 1.2 < z < 2.9. We directly compare the variabilities in the CIV 1549 and SiIV 1400 absorption to try to ascertain the cause(s) of the variability. We find that SiIV BALs are more likely to vary than CIV BALs. When looking at flow speeds >-20 000 km/s, 47 per cent of quasars exhibited SiIV variability while 31 per cent exhibited CIV variability. Furthermore, ~50 per cent of the variable SiIV regions did not have corresponding CIV variability at the same velocities. When…
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