Characterizing the WISE-selected Heavily Obscured Quasar Population with Optical Spectroscopy from the Southern African Large Telescope
R. E. Hviding (Dartmouth), R. C. Hickox, K. N. Hainline, C. M., Carroll, M. A. DiPompeo, W. Yan, and M. L. Jones

TL;DR
This study uses optical spectroscopy from SALT to characterize heavily obscured quasars selected via WISE mid-IR colors, revealing a population of deeply buried AGNs with high extinction that are missed by X-ray surveys.
Contribution
It introduces a new selection method outside traditional mid-IR cuts to identify heavily obscured quasars, expanding the known population of buried AGNs.
Findings
65% of candidates show emission lines allowing redshift determination
70% of objects with redshift are confirmed as AGNs
Spectral energy distribution modeling indicates high AGN fractions and large extinction values
Abstract
We present the results of an optical spectroscopic survey of 46 heavily obscured quasar candidates. Objects are selected using their mid-infrared (mid-IR) colours and magnitudes from the Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) and their optical magnitudes from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). Candidate Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs) are selected to have mid-IR colours indicative of quasar activity and lie in a region of mid-IR colour space outside previously published X-ray based selection regions. We obtain optical spectra for our sample using the Robert Stobie Spectrograph on the Southern African Large Telescope. Thirty objects (65%) have identifiable emission lines, allowing for the determination of spectroscopic redshifts. Other than one object at , candidates have moderate redshifts ranging from to with a median of 0.3. Twenty-one (70%) of our objects…
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