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We investigate the UV-optical (longward of Ly$alpha$ 1216AA) spectral variability of nearly 9000 quasars ($0<z<4$) using multi-epoch photometric data within the SDSS Stripe 82 region. The regression slope in the flux-flux space of a quasar light curve directly measures the color of the flux difference spectrum, then the spectral shape of the flux difference spectra can be derived by taking a careful look at the redshift dependence of the regression slopes. First, we confirm that the observed quasar spectrum becomes bluer when the quasar becomes brighter. We infer the spectral index of the composite difference spectrum as $alpha_{ u}^{text{dif}}sim +1/3$ (in the form of $f_{ u}propto u^{alpha_{ u}}$), which is significantly bluer than that of the composite spectrum $alpha_{ u}^{text{com}}sim -0.5$. We also show that the continuum variability cannot be explained by the accretion disk models with varying mass accretion rate. Second, we examine the effects of broad emission line variability on the color-redshift space. The variability of the Small Blue Bump is extensively discussed. We show that the low-ionization lines of MgII and FeII are less variable compared to Balmer emission lines and high-ionization lines, and the Balmer continuum is the dominant variable source around $sim 3000$AA. These results are compared with previous studies, and the physical mechanisms of the variability of the continuum and emission lines are discussed.
We present a new approach to analysing the dependence of quasar variability on rest-frame wavelengths. We exploited the spectral archive of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) to create a sample of more than 9000 quasars in the Stripe 82. The quasar
For some samples, it has been shown that spectra of QSOs with low redshift are bluer during their brighter phases. For the FIRST bright QSO sample, we assemble their spectra from SDSS DR7 to investigate variability between the spectra from White et a
The SDSS-III BOSS Quasar survey will attempt to observe z>2.15 quasars at a density of at least 15 per square degree to yield the first measurement of the Baryon Acoustic Oscillations in the Ly-alpha forest. To help reaching this goal, we have develo
We present Spitzer InfraRed Spectrograph (IRS) low-resolution spectra of 16 spectroscopically selected post-starburst quasars (PSQs) at z ~ 0.3. The optical spectra of these broad-lined active galactic nuclei (AGNs) simultaneously show spectral signa
Hundreds of Type 2 quasars have been identified in Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) data, and there is substantial evidence that they are generally galaxies with highly obscured central engines, in accord with unified models for active galactic nuclei