Fifty Years of Quasars: Physical Insights and Potential for Cosmology
J. W. Sulentic, P. Marziani, D. Dultzin, M. D'Onofrio, A. del Olmo

TL;DR
This review commemorates 50 years of quasar research, highlighting their physical properties, spectral diversity, and potential as cosmological tools, emphasizing recent advances in understanding their accretion states and classification.
Contribution
It synthesizes 50 years of quasar studies, introducing the 4D Eigenvector 1 parameter space and proposing quasar populations A and B based on Eddington ratios, with implications for cosmology.
Findings
Quasars show a principal sequence driven by Eddington ratio.
Two main quasar populations (A and B) are distinguished by accretion rates.
Extreme Population A quasars may serve as standard candles.
Abstract
Last year (2013) was more or less the 50th anniversary of the discovery of quasars. It is an interesting time to review what we know (and don't know) about them both empirically and theoretically. These compact sources involving line emitting plasma show extraordinary luminosities extending to one thousand times that of our Milky Way in emitting volumes of a few solar system diameters (bolometric luminosity log L 44-48 [erg s]: D=1-3 light months - gravitational radii). The advent of 8-10 meter class telescopes enables us to study them spectroscopically in ever greater detail. In 2000 we introduced a 4D Eigenvector 1 parameters space involving optical, UV and X-Ray measures designed to serve as a 4D equivalent of the 2D Hertzsprung-Russell diagram so important for depicting the diversity of stellar types and evolutionary states. This diagram…
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