Quasars as Standard Candles IV. Analysis of the X-ray and UV indicators of the disc-corona relation
Matilde Signorini, Guido Risaliti, Elisabeta Lusso, Emanuele Nardini,, Giada Bargiacchi, Andrea Sacchi, and Bartolomeo Trefoloni

TL;DR
This study identifies optimal X-ray and UV spectral indicators in quasars to improve the precision of their use as standard candles for cosmological distance measurements.
Contribution
It determines that fluxes at 1 keV and 2500A are the best proxies for the X-ray and UV emission, enhancing the quasar distance estimation method.
Findings
Monochromatic fluxes at 1 keV and 2500A are the best indicators.
A tight relation exists between soft X-ray and Mg ii line fluxes.
The spectroscopic indicators produce a Hubble diagram consistent with photometric methods.
Abstract
Context: A non-linear relation between quasar monochromatic luminosities at 2500A and 2 keV holds at all observed redshifts and luminosities, and it has been used to derive quasar distances and to build a Hubble Diagram of quasars. The choice of the X-ray and UV indicators has so far been somewhat arbitrary, and has typically relied on photometric data. Aims: We want to determine the X-ray and UV proxies that provide the smallest dispersion of the relation, in order to obtain more precise distance estimates, and to confirm the reliability of the X-ray to UV relation as a distance indicator. Methods: We performed a complete UV spectroscopic analysis of a sample of 1800 quasars with SDSS optical spectra and XMM- Newton X-ray serendipitous observations. In the X-rays, we analysed the spectra of all the sample objects at redshift z 1.9, while we relied on photometric measurements…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
