BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey XXI: The Data Release 2 Overview
Michael J. Koss, Benny Trakhtenbrot, Claudio Ricci, Franz E. Bauer,, Ezequiel Treister, Richard Mushotzky, C. Megan Urry, Tonima T. Ananna, Mislav, Balokovic, Jakob S. den Brok, S. Bradley Cenko, Fiona Harrison, Kohei, Ichikawa, Isabella Lamperti, Amy Lein

TL;DR
The BASS DR2 provides an extensive, high-quality spectroscopic dataset of local AGN, enabling detailed studies of SMBH properties, host galaxy characteristics, and their co-evolution, with nearly complete redshift and black hole mass measurements.
Contribution
This paper presents the second data release of the BASS survey, offering unprecedented spectral data and measurements for a comprehensive census of nearby AGN and SMBH properties.
Findings
High completeness of redshift and black hole mass measurements.
Spectral coverage includes optical and NIR for 858 AGN.
Sample spans over 5 orders of magnitude in luminosity and black hole mass.
Abstract
The BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey (BASS) is designed to provide a highly complete census of the key physical parameters of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) that power local active galactic nuclei (AGN) (z<0.3), including their bolometric luminosity, black hole mass, accretion rates, and line-of-sight gas obscuration, and the distinctive properties of their host galaxies (e.g., star formation rates, masses, and gas fractions). We present an overview of the BASS data release 2 (DR2), an unprecedented spectroscopic survey in spectral range, resolution, and sensitivity, including 1449 optical (3200-10000 A) and 233 NIR (1-2.5 um) spectra for the brightest 858 ultra-hard X-ray (14-195 keV) selected AGN across the entire sky and essentially all levels of obscuration. This release provides a highly complete set of key measurements (emission line measurements and central velocity dispersions),…
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.
