Extremely Red Quasars from SDSS, BOSS and WISE: Classification of Optical Spectra
Nicholas P. Ross, Fred Hamann, Nadia L. Zakamska, Gordon T. Richards,, Carolin Villforth, Michael A. Strauss, Jenny E. Greene, Rachael Alexandroff,, W. Niel Brandt, Guilin Liu, Adam D. Myers, Isabelle Paris, Donald P., Schneider

TL;DR
This study identifies extremely red quasars using SDSS, BOSS, and WISE data, revealing their spectral properties, redshift distribution, and potential implications for quasar evolution and obscuration models.
Contribution
It presents a new sample of extremely red quasars with detailed spectral classification and highlights unusual emission line features challenging standard AGN unified models.
Findings
Identified 65 extremely red quasars with high infrared-to-optical ratios.
Discovered a bimodal redshift distribution with peaks at z~0.8 and z~2.5.
Found a significant fraction of Type 1 quasars with unusually large emission line REWs.
Abstract
Quasars with extremely red infrared-to-optical colours are an interesting population that can test ideas about quasar evolution as well as orientation, obscuration and geometric effects in the so-called AGN unified model. To identify such a population we match the quasar catalogues of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) to the Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) to identify quasars with extremely high infrared-to-optical ratios. We identify 65 objects with r(AB)-W4(Vega)>14 mag (i.e., F_nu(22um)/F_nu(r) > ~1000). This sample spans a redshift range of 0.28<z<4.36 and has a bimodal distribution, with peaks at z~0.8 and z~2.5. It includes three z>2.6 objects that are detected in the W4-band but not W1 or W2 (i.e., W1W2-dropouts). The SDSS/BOSS spectra show that the majority of the objects are reddened Type 1 quasars, Type 2 quasars…
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