What about high redshift sources in the Main Sequence of quasars?
A. Deconto-Machado, A. del Olmo Orozco, and P. Marziani

TL;DR
This study investigates the spectroscopic properties of high-redshift quasars within the Main Sequence framework to understand the influence of relativistic jets on accretion disk winds and emission line features.
Contribution
It provides new observational insights into the line profiles of high-redshift, high-luminosity quasars, focusing on the impact of jets on wind properties and emission regions.
Findings
Analysis of Hβ and C IV line profiles reveals differences in wind contributions.
Relativistic jets may alter the structure and dynamics of accretion disk winds.
Results suggest jet presence influences emission line characteristics in quasars.
Abstract
Much effort has been done in order to better understand the active galactic nuclei mechanisms behind the relativistic jets observed in radio-loud sources. These phenomena are commonly seen in luminous objects with intermediate/high redshift such as quasars, so that the analysis of the spectroscopic properties of these sources may be a way to clarify this issue. Measurements are presented and contextualized taking advantage of the set of correlations associated with the quasar Main Sequence (MS), a parameter space that allows to connect observed properties to the relative relevance of radiative and gravitational forces. In the redshift range we consider, the low-ionization HI Balmer line H\b{eta} is shifted into the near infrared. Here we present first results of a sample of 22 high-luminosity quasars with redshift between 1.4 and 3.8. Observations covering the H\b{eta} spectral region…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
