The correlations between optical variability and physical parameters of quasars in SDSS Stripe 82
Wenwen Zuo, Xue-Bing Wu, Yi-Qing Liu, Cheng-Liang Jiao

TL;DR
This study analyzes optical variability in over 7,600 quasars from SDSS Stripe 82, revealing correlations with physical parameters and supporting accretion rate changes as a key driver of variability.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of quasar variability across multiple parameters and tests the accretion disk model against observed correlations.
Findings
Variability anti-correlates with rest-frame wavelength.
Radio-quiet quasars show little evolution in variability over cosmic time.
Variability increases as luminosity or Eddington ratio decreases.
Abstract
We investigate the optical variability of 7658 quasars from SDSS Stripe 82. Taking advantage of a larger sample and relatively more data points for each quasar, we estimate variability amplitudes and divide the sample into small bins of redshift, rest-frame wavelength, black hole mass, Eddington ratio and bolometric luminosity respectively, to investigate the relationships between variability and these parameters. An anti-correlation between variability and rest-frame wavelength is found. The variability amplitude of radio-quiet quasars shows almost no cosmological evolution, but that of radio-loud ones may weakly anti-correlate with redshift. In addition, variability increases as either luminosity or Eddington ratio decreases. However, the relationship between variability and black hole mass is uncertain; it is negative when the influence of Eddington ratio is excluded, but positive…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
