Understanding the Broad-line Region of Active Galactic Nuclei with Photoionization. I. the Moderate-Accretion Regime
Qiaoya Wu, Yue Shen, Hengxiao Guo, Scott F. Anderson, W. N. Brandt,, Catherine J. Grier, Patrick B. Hall, Luis C. Ho, Yasaman Homayouni, Keith, Horne, Jennifer I-Hsiu Li, and Donald P. Schneider

TL;DR
This study uses photoionization models to analyze the broad-line region of active galactic nuclei in the moderate-accretion regime, comparing predictions with observations to understand the impact of accretion parameters on emission lines and BLR size.
Contribution
It provides a detailed photoionization analysis of AGN broad-line regions, linking line properties to accretion parameters and offering recipes to infer ionizing continua from observable line ratios.
Findings
Photoionization models reasonably reproduce UV/optical line strengths.
Universal ionization and density parameters qualitatively match the R-L relation.
Gas density likely increases with accretion rate, affecting BLR size trends.
Abstract
Over three decades of reverberation mapping (RM) studies on local broad-line active galactic nuclei (AGNs) have measured reliable black-hole (BH) masses for AGNs. These RM measurements reveal a significant correlation between the Balmer broad-line region size and the AGN optical luminosity (the relation). Recent RM studies for AGN samples with more diverse BH accretion parameters (e.g., mass and Eddington ratio) reveal a substantial intrinsic dispersion around the average relation, suggesting variations in the overall spectral energy distribution shape as functions of accretion parameters. Here we perform a detailed photoionization investigation of expected broad-line properties as functions of accretion parameters, using the latest models for the AGN continuum implemented in {\tt qsosed}. We compare theoretical predictions with observations of a sample of 67…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
