B2 0003+38A: a classical flat-spectrum radio quasar hosted by a rotation-dominated galaxy with a peculiar massive outflow
Qinyuan Zhao, Luming Sun, Lu Shen, Guilin Liu, Hongyan Zhou, Tuo Ji

TL;DR
This study analyzes the optical spectrum of the flat-spectrum radio quasar B2 0003+38A, revealing a rotating disk galaxy with a peculiar massive outflow and extended emission line region, suggesting a gas-rich disk host for this quasar.
Contribution
First detailed spectral analysis showing that a classical FSRQ is hosted by a gas-rich disk galaxy with a significant outflow and extended emission line region.
Findings
Detection of a rotating disk galaxy hosting the FSRQ.
Identification of a massive, redshifted extended emission line region.
Evidence supporting a gas-rich disk galaxy host for the FSRQ.
Abstract
We present a detailed analysis of the single-slit optical spectrum of the Flat-Spectrum Radio Quasar (FSRQ) B2 0003+38A, taken by the Echellette Spectrograph and Imager (ESI) on the Keck II telescope. This classical low-redshift FSRQ (, as measured from the stellar absorption lines) remains underexplored in its emission lines, though its broad-band continuum properties from radio to X-ray is well-studied. After removing the unresolved quasar nucleus and the starlight from the host galaxy, we obtain a spatially-resolved 2-D spectrum, which clearly shows three components, indicating a rotating disk, an extended emission line region (EELR) and an outflow. The bulk of the EELR, with a characteristic mass , and redshifted by km s with respect to the quasar systemic velocity, shows a one-sided structure…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
