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We consider implications of our new model of quasar lifetimes and light curves for the quasar luminosity function (LF) at different frequencies and redshifts. In our picture, quasars evolve rapidly and the lifetime depends on both their instantaneous and peak luminosities. The bright end of the LF traces the peak intrinsic quasar activity, but the faint end consists of quasars which are either undergoing exponential growth to much larger masses and luminosities, or are in sub-Eddington quiescent states going into or coming out of a period of peak activity. The break in the observed LF corresponds directly to the maximum in the intrinsic distribution of peak luminosities, which falls off at both brighter and fainter luminosities. We study this model using simulations of galaxy mergers which successfully reproduce a wide range of observed quasar phenomena, including the observed column density distribution. By combining quasar lifetimes and the distribution of maximum quasar luminosities determined from the observed hard X-ray LF with the corresponding luminosity and host-system dependent column densities, we produce the expected soft X-ray and B-band LFs. Our predictions agree exceptionally well with the observed LFs at all observed luminosities, over the redshift range considered (z < 1), without invoking any ad hoc assumptions about an obscured population of sources. Our results also suggest that observed correlations in hard X-ray samples between the obscured fraction of quasars and luminosity can be explained in the context of our model by the expulsion of surrounding gas due to heating from accretion feedback energy as a quasar nears its peak luminosity and final black hole mass.
We propose a new interpretation of the quasar luminosity function (LF), derived from physically motivated models of quasar lifetimes and light curves. In our picture, quasars evolve rapidly and their lifetime depends on both their instantaneous and p
We have investigated effects of dust attenuation on quasar luminosity functions using a semi-analytic galaxy formation model combined with a large cosmological N-body simulation. We estimate the dust attenuation of quasars self-consistently with that
We determine the number counts and z=0-5 luminosity function for a well-defined, homogeneous sample of quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). We conservatively define the most uniform statistical sample possible, consisting of 15,343 quasa
X-ray and multi-wavelength observations of the most luminous known local (z<0.3) AGN, the recently discovered radio-quiet quasar PDS 456, are presented. The spectral energy distribution shows that PDS 456 has a bolometric luminosity of 1e47 erg/s, pe
Quasars accreting matter at very high rates (known as extreme Population A [xA]) may provide a new class of distance indicators covering cosmic epochs from present day up to less than 1 Gyr from the Big Bang. We report on the developments of a method