Determining the fraction of reddened quasars in COSMOS with multiple selection techniques from X-ray to radio wavelengths
K. E. Heintz, J. P. U. Fynbo, P. M{\o}ller, B. Milvang-Jensen, J., Zabl, N. Maddox, J.-K. Krogager, S. Geier, M. Vestergaard, P. Noterdaeme, C., Ledoux

TL;DR
This study quantifies the fraction of reddened quasars in the COSMOS field using multiwavelength data, revealing that nearly 40% of bright unresolved quasars are reddened, highlighting biases in optical surveys.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive estimate of reddened quasar fractions in COSMOS using multiwavelength selection, improving understanding of quasar populations beyond optical biases.
Findings
21% of the sample are high $A_V$ quasars.
39% of bright unresolved quasars are reddened.
Optical surveys miss some reddened quasars due to spectral properties.
Abstract
The sub-population of quasars reddened by intrinsic or intervening clouds of dust are known to be underrepresented in optical quasar surveys. By defining a complete parent sample of the brightest and spatially unresolved quasars in the COSMOS field, we quantify to which extent this sub-population is fundamental to our understanding of the true population of quasars. By using the available multiwavelength data of various surveys in the COSMOS field, we built a parent sample of 33 quasars brighter than mag, identified by reliable X-ray to radio wavelength selection techniques. Spectroscopic follow-up with the NOT/ALFOSC was carried out for four candidate quasars that had not been targeted previously to obtain a 100\% redshift completeness of the sample. The population of high quasars (HAQs), a specific sub-population of quasars selected from optical/near-infrared photometry,…
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