ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Using a large sample of 26623 quasars with redshifts in the range $1.5 le zle 5.1$ with civ $lambda$1549 AA emission line in Fifth Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), we investigate the cosmological evolution of the Baldwin Effect, i.e. the relation between the equivalent width (EW) of the civ emission line and continuum luminosity. We confirm the earlier result that there exists a strong correlation between the civ EW and the continuum luminosity, and we find that, up to $zapprox 5$, the slope of the Baldwin Effect seems to have no effect of cosmological evolution. A sub-sample of 13960 quasars with broad civ $lambda$1549 AA emission line from SDSS is used to explore the origin of the Baldwin Effect. We find that civ EW have a strong correlation with the mass of supermassive black hole (SMBH), and a weak correlation with the Eddington ratio, $lb/ledd$. This suggests that the SMBH mass is probably the primary drive for the Baldwin Effect.
Using the properties of SDSS DR7 QSOs catalog from Shen et al., the Baldwin effect, its slope evolution, the underlying drive for a large sample of 35019 QSOs with reliable spectral analysis are investigated. We find that the Baldwin effect exists in
We present observations at 250 GHz (1.2 mm), 43 GHz, and 1.4 GHz of a sample of 41 QSOs at z > 3.7 found in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. We detect 16 sources with a 250 GHz flux density greater than 1.4 mJy. The combination of centimeter and millime
The variability of broad absorption lines is investigated for a sample of 188 broad-absorption-line (BAL) quasars (QSOs) ($z > 1.7$) with at least two-epoch observations from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 7 (SDSS DR7), covering a time-sca
We examine whether the spectral energy distribution of UV continuum emission of active galactic nuclei changes during flux variation. We used multi-epoch photometric data of QSOs in the Stripe 82 observed by the SDSS Legacy Survey and selected 10 bri
Broad emission lines is a prominent property of type I quasi-stellar objects (QSOs). The origin of the Baldwin effect for civ $lambda1549~$AA broad emission lines, i.e., the luminosity dependence of the civ equivalent width (EW), is not clearly estab