C IV BAL disappearance in a large SDSS QSO sample
D. De Cicco, W.N. Brandt, C.J. Grier, M. Paolillo, N. Filiz Ak, D. P., Schneider, J. R. Trump

TL;DR
This study analyzes over 1500 quasar spectra from SDSS to investigate the disappearance of C IV broad absorption lines, estimating their lifetime and exploring the mechanisms behind their variability.
Contribution
It provides the largest sample to date of disappearing BALs, estimates their average lifetime, and examines the correlation of variability across multiple troughs.
Findings
3.9% of BALs disappear over 0.28-4.9 years
Estimated BAL lifetime of 80-100 years
Persistent correlation in multiple trough variability
Abstract
Broad absorption lines (BALs) in the spectra of quasi-stellar objects (QSOs) originate from outflowing winds along our line of sight; winds are thought to originate from the inner regions of the QSO accretion disk, close to the central supermassive black hole (SMBH). Winds likely play a role in galaxy evolution and aid the accretion mechanism onto the SMBH. BAL equivalent widths can change on typical timescales from months to years; such variability is generally attributed to changes in the covering factor and/or in the ionization level of the gas. We investigate BAL variability, focusing on BAL disappearance. We analyze multi-epoch spectra of more than 1500 QSOs -the largest sample ever used for such a study- observed by different programs from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-I/II/III (SDSS), and search for disappearing C IV BALs. The spectra rest-frame time baseline ranges from 0.28 to…
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