Optical/near-infrared selection of red QSOs: Evidence for steep extinction curves towards galactic centers?
J. P. U. Fynbo, J.-K. Krogager, B. Venemans, P. Noterdaeme, M., Vestergaard, P. Moller, C. Ledoux, S. Geier

TL;DR
This study uses optical and near-infrared imaging to efficiently identify red QSOs, revealing that their dust extinction curves towards galactic centers are likely steeper than previously assumed, with implications for understanding dust properties.
Contribution
It introduces a near-infrared based selection method for red QSOs and investigates the nature of their dust extinction curves, highlighting the limitations of existing models.
Findings
79% of candidates confirmed as QSOs
Most reddened QSOs have dust in host galaxies
Standard SMC-like extinction curves do not fit near-IR data
Abstract
We present the results of a search for red QSOs using a selection based on optical imaging from SDSS and near-infrared imaging from UKIDSS. For a sample of 58 candidates 46 (79%) are confirmed to be QSOs. The QSOs are predominantly dust-reddened except a handul at redshifts z>3.5. The dust is most likely located in the QSO host galaxies. 4 (7%) of the candidates turned out to be late-type stars, and another 4 (7%) are compact galaxies. The remaining 4 objects we could not identify. In terms of their optical spectra the QSOs are similar to the QSOs selected in the FIRST-2MASS red Quasar survey except they are on average fainter, more distant and only two are detected in the FIRST survey. We estimate the amount of extinction using the SDSS QSO template reddened by SMC-like dust. It is possible to get a good match to the observed (restframe ultraviolet) spectra, but for nearly all the…
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