What controls the UV-to-X-ray continuum shape in quasars?
John D. Timlin III, W. N. Brandt, and Ari Laor

TL;DR
This study investigates how the UV-to-X-ray spectral shape in quasars is influenced by luminosity and other factors, revealing a physical mechanism that links emission across different regions.
Contribution
It uncovers a strong correlation between UV-to-X-ray spectral slope and HeII EW, indicating a unified control of the continuum shape across multiple emission regions.
Findings
Strong $eta_{ox}$--$L_{2500}$ and HeII EW--$L_{2500}$ anti-correlations
Significant $eta_{ox}$--HeII EW correlation independent of luminosity
Continuum emission from UV to X-ray is physically coupled across different regions
Abstract
We present an investigation of the interdependence of the optical-to-X-ray spectral slope (), the HeII equivalent-width (EW), and the monochromatic luminosity at 2500 Angstroms (). The values of and HeII EW are indicators of the strength/shape of the quasar ionizing continuum, from the ultraviolet (UV; 1500--2500 Angstroms), through the extreme ultraviolet (EUV; 300--50 Angstroms), to the X-ray (2 keV) regime. For this investigation, we measure the HeII EW of 206 radio-quiet quasars devoid of broad absorption lines that have high-quality spectral observations of the UV and 2 keV X-rays. The sample spans wide redshift ( 0.13--3.5) and luminosity (log) 29.2--32.5 erg s Hz) ranges. We recover the well-known -- and HeII EW-- anti-correlations, and we find a similarly…
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