A Spectroscopic Survey of WISE-selected Obscured Quasars with the Southern African Large Telescope
Kevin N. Hainline, Ryan C. Hickox, Christopher M. Carroll, Adam D., Myers, Michael A. DiPompeo, Laura Trouille

TL;DR
This study uses optical spectroscopy from SALT to confirm that WISE mid-infrared colors effectively identify obscured quasars, revealing their redshifts, spectral features, and the dominance of AGN components in their SEDs.
Contribution
It provides the first spectroscopic confirmation of WISE-selected obscured quasars and validates mid-infrared color selection as an effective method for identifying luminous obscured AGNs.
Findings
Majority of sources have narrow emission lines.
W4-bright sources are at lower redshift.
Most objects require a strong AGN component in SEDs.
Abstract
We present the results of an optical spectroscopic survey of a sample of 40 candidate obscured quasars identified on the basis of their mid-infrared emission detected by the Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE). Optical spectra for this survey were obtained using the Robert Stobie Spectrograph (RSS) on the Southern African Large Telescope (SALT). Our sample was selected with WISE colors characteristic of AGNs, as well as red optical to mid-IR colors indicating that the optical/UV AGN continuum is obscured by dust. We obtain secure redshifts for the majority of the objects that comprise our sample (35/40), and find that sources that are bright in the WISE W4 (22m) band are typically at moderate redshift (<z> = 0.35). The majority of the sources have narrow emission lines, with optical colors and emission line…
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