A candidate Optically Quiescent Quasar lacking narrow emission lines
Claire Greenwell, Poshak Gandhi, Daniel Stern, Peter Boorman, Yoshiki, Toba, George Lansbury, Vincenzo Mainieri, Christopher Desira

TL;DR
This paper identifies and characterizes a luminous AGN candidate that lacks narrow emission lines, suggesting a transitional phase in AGN evolution possibly caused by obscuring material blocking ionizing radiation.
Contribution
It formalizes a new AGN subpopulation lacking narrow emission lines, proposing a potential obscuration scenario and highlighting a transitional evolutionary phase.
Findings
IR colors typical for AGN
Optical spectrum dominated by galaxy continuum
Weak [OIII] emission line
Abstract
Many Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) surveys rely on optical emission line signatures for robust source classification. There are, however, examples of luminous AGN candidates lacking such signatures, including those from the narrow line region, which are expected to be less susceptible to classical nuclear (torus) obscuration. Here, we seek to formalise this subpopulation of AGN with a prototypical candidate, SDSS J075139.06+402810.9. This shows IR colours typical for AGN, an optical spectrum dominated by an early type galaxy continuum,an [OIII] 5007\r{A} limiting flux about two dex below Type 2 quasars at similar IR power, and a k-corrected 12 micron quasar-like luminosity of 10 erg s. These characteristics are not consistent with jet and host galaxy dilution. A potential scenario to explain this AGN quiescence in the optical is a sky-covering "cocoon" of obscuring…
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