A new physical interpretation of optical and infrared variability in quasars
Nicholas P. Ross, K. E. Saavik Ford, Matthew Graham, Barry McKernan,, Daniel Stern, Aaron M. Meisner, Roberto J. Assef, Arjun Dey, Andrew J. Drake,, Hyunsung D. Jun, Dustin Lang

TL;DR
This paper presents a new physical interpretation of optical and infrared variability in changing-look quasars, emphasizing the role of the innermost accretion disk regions and their dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking changing-look quasar variability to dramatic changes in the innermost accretion disk near the black hole's ISCO.
Findings
Unique infrared and optical flux evolution observed in SDSS J110057.70-005304.5
Variability driven by changes in the innermost accretion disk structure
Predicted future increase in hydrogen emission lines based on the model
Abstract
Changing-look quasars are a recently identified class of active galaxies in which the strong UV continuum and/or broad optical hydrogen emission lines associated with unobscured quasars either appear or disappear on timescales of months to years. The physical processes responsible for this behaviour are still debated, but changes in the black hole accretion rate or accretion disk structure appear more likely than changes in obscuration. Here we report on four epochs of spectroscopy of SDSS J110057.70-005304.5, a quasar at a redshift of whose UV continuum and broad hydrogen emission lines have faded, and then returned over the past 20 years. The change in this quasar was initially identified in the infrared, and an archival spectrum from 2010 shows an intermediate phase of the transition during which the flux below rest-frame 3400\AA\ has decreased by close to…
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