The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: Velocity Shifts of Quasar Emission Lines
Yue Shen, W.N. Brandt, Gordon T. Richards, Kelly D. Denney, Jenny E., Greene, C.J. Grier, Luis C. Ho, Bradley M. Peterson, Patrick Petitjean,, Donald P. Schneider, Charling Tao, Jonathan R. Trump

TL;DR
This study analyzes velocity shifts in quasar emission lines from SDSS-RM data, providing empirical guidelines for unbiased redshift estimation and quantifying intrinsic uncertainties across various lines and luminosities.
Contribution
It offers the first comprehensive analysis of quasar emission line velocity shifts using high-quality SDSS-RM spectra, establishing empirical redshift calibration guidelines and uncertainty estimates.
Findings
Velocity shifts vary with quasar luminosity and line species.
Redshift uncertainties are significantly larger than pipeline estimates.
Unbiased systemic redshifts can be achieved with specific lines, but with intrinsic uncertainties.
Abstract
Quasar emission lines are often shifted from the systemic velocity due to various dynamical and radiative processes in the line-emitting region. The level of these velocity shifts depends both on the line species and on quasar properties. We study velocity shifts for the line peaks of various narrow and broad quasar emission lines relative to systemic using a sample of 849 quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping (SDSS-RM) project. The coadded (from 32 epochs) spectra of individual quasars have sufficient signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) to measure stellar absorption lines to provide reliable systemic velocity estimates, as well as weak narrow emission lines. The sample also covers a large dynamic range in quasar luminosity (~2 dex), allowing us to explore potential luminosity dependence of the velocity shifts. We derive average line peak velocity shifts as a function…
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