The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: Key Results
Yue Shen, Catherine J. Grier, Keith Horne, Zachary Stone, Jennifer I., Li, Qian Yang, Yasaman Homayouni, Jonathan R. Trump, Scott F. Anderson, W. N., Brandt, Patrick B. Hall, Luis C. Ho, Linhua Jiang, Patrick Petitjean, Donald, P. Schneider, Charling Tao, Fergus. R. Donnan

TL;DR
This paper presents comprehensive reverberation mapping data for 849 quasars over 11 years, deriving new black hole mass estimates and improved scaling relations, advancing understanding of quasar properties across a broad redshift and luminosity range.
Contribution
It provides the final data set from SDSS-RM, new virial factor estimates, refined single-epoch mass recipes, and insights into the R-L relations for quasars at various redshifts.
Findings
23, 81, 125, and 110 reverberation lags measured for Halpha, Hbeta, MgII, and CIV.
Derived a new average virial factor <log f>=0.62 with scatter, indicating systematic uncertainties.
Improved single-epoch mass estimators for Hbeta, MgII, and CIV with quantified biases and scatter.
Abstract
We present the final data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping (SDSS-RM) project, a precursor to the SDSS-V Black Hole Mapper Reverberation Mapping program. This data set includes 11-year photometric and 7-year spectroscopic light curves for 849 broad-line quasars over a redshift range of 0.1<z<4.5 and a luminosity range of Lbol=1E44-47.5 erg/s, along with spectral and variability measurements. We report 23, 81, 125, and 110 reverberation mapping lags (relative to optical continuum variability) for broad Halpha, Hbeta, MgII and CIV using the SDSS-RM sample, spanning much of the luminosity and redshift ranges of the sample. Using 30 low-redshift RM AGNs with dynamical-modeling black hole masses, we derive a new estimate of the average virial factor of <log f>=0.62+-0.07 for the line dispersion measured from the RMS spectrum. The intrinsic scatter of individual virial…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
