Broad Absorption Line Quasars with Redshifted Troughs: High-Velocity Infall or Rotationally Dominated Outflows?
Patrick B. Hall (York University, Toronto, Canada), W. N. Brandt, P., Petitjean, I. Paris, N. Filiz Ak, Yue Shen, R. R. Gibson, E. Aubourg, S. F., Anderson, D. P. Schneider, D. Bizyaev, J. Brinkmann, E. Malanushenko, V., Malanushenko, A. D. Myers, D. J. Oravetz, N. P. Ross

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of 17 BAL quasars with redshifted absorption features, exploring their possible origins and implications for understanding quasar inner regions.
Contribution
First identification of BAL quasars with redshifted troughs, analyzing their properties and proposing potential mechanisms like infall or rotationally dominated outflows.
Findings
Redshifted absorption occurs in about 0.1% of BAL quasars.
Redshifted troughs are more common in low-ionization lines.
Possible origins include infall of dense gas or rotational outflows.
Abstract
We report the discovery in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and the SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey of seventeen broad absorption line (BAL) quasars with high-ionization troughs that include absorption redshifted relative to the quasar rest frame. The redshifted troughs extend to velocities up to v=12,000 km/s and the trough widths exceed 3000 km/s in all but one case. Approximately 1 in 1000 BAL quasars with blueshifted C IV absorption also has redshifted C IV absorption; objects with C IV absorption present only at redshifted velocities are roughly four times rarer. In more than half of our objects, redshifted absorption is seen in C II or Al III as well as C IV, making low-ionization absorption at least ten times more common among BAL quasars with redshifted troughs than among standard BAL quasars. However, the C IV absorption equivalent widths in our objects are on…
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