Appearance vs Disappearance of broad absorption line troughs in quasars
Sapna Mishra, M. Vivek, Hum Chand, and Ravi Joshi

TL;DR
This study investigates the appearance and disappearance of broad absorption line (BAL) troughs in quasars over several years, revealing that ionization changes primarily drive BAL variability and correlating with continuum dimming.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of BAL appearance and disappearance in quasars, highlighting the role of ionization changes over dust models in BAL variability.
Findings
Appearing BAL quasars are at higher redshift with shorter timescales.
BAL appearance correlates with continuum dimming and spectral index changes.
Ionization condition changes are the main driver of BAL variability.
Abstract
We present a new set of 84 Broad absorption line (BAL) quasars ( 1.7 \zem 4.4) exhibiting an appearance of \civ BAL troughs over 0.34.8 rest-frame years by comparing the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release (SDSSDR)-7, SDSSDR-12, and SDSSDR-14 quasar catalogs. We contrast the nature of BAL variability in this appearing BAL quasar sample with a disappearing BAL quasar sample studied in literature by comparing the quasar's intrinsic, BAL trough, and continuum parameters between the two samples. We find that appearing BAL quasars have relatively higher redshift and smaller probed timescales as compared to the disappearing BAL quasars. To mitigate the effect of any redshift bias, we created control samples of appearing and disappearing BAL quasars that have similar redshift distribution. We find that the appearing BAL quasars are relatively brighter and have shallower and wider…
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