Quasar Classification Using Color and Variability
Christina M. Peters (1), Gordon T. Richards (1), Adam D. Myers (2),, Michael A. Strauss (3), Kasper B. Schmidt (4), \v{Z}eljko Ivezi\'c (5),, Nicholas P. Ross (6), Chelsea L. MacLeod (6), Ryan Riegel (7) ((1) Drexel, University, (2) University of Wyoming

TL;DR
This study develops a combined color and variability method using Bayesian algorithms to identify quasars in optical surveys, achieving high completeness and efficiency, especially at challenging redshifts, and provides a large candidate catalog for further analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach combining color and variability data with Bayesian methods for quasar selection, improving accuracy over previous techniques.
Findings
Achieved 97% quasar completeness with combined selection.
Identified 35,820 quasar candidates in SDSS Stripe 82.
Enhanced quasar detection at redshifts 2.7<z<3.5.
Abstract
We conduct a pilot investigation to determine the optimal combination of color and variability information to identify quasars in current and future multi-epoch optical surveys. We use a Bayesian quasar selection algorithm (Richards et al. 2004) to identify 35,820 type 1 quasar candidates in a 239 square degree field of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Stripe 82, using a combination of optical photometry and variability. Color analysis is performed on 5-band single- and multi-epoch SDSS optical photometry to a depth of r ~22.4. From these data, variability parameters are calculated by fitting the structure function of each object in each band with a power law model using 10 to >100 observations over timescales from ~1 day to ~8 years. Selection was based on a training sample of 13,221 spectroscopically-confirmed type-1 quasars, largely from the SDSS. Using variability alone, colors…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
