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We present a study of a sample of 223 radio-loud quasars (up to redshift $<$0.3) in order to investigate their spectral properties. Twenty-six of these radio-loud quasars are identified as Flat Spectrum Radio Quasars (FSRQs) and fifty-four are identified as Steep Spectrum Radio Quasars (SSRQs) based on their radio spectral index. We study the [O III] line properties of these quasars to investigate the origin and properties of blue wings (shift of the profile towards lower wavelengths) and blue outliers (shift of the whole spectroscopic feature). Most of the quasars show blue wings with velocities up to 420 km $s^{-1}$. We find that around 17% of the quasars show outliers with velocities spanning 419 to -315 km $s^{-1}$. Finally, we revisit the $it M_{rm BH} - sigma$ relation of our sample using [S II]$lambda$6716, 6731 and [O III] linewidths as surrogates for stellar velocity dispersions, $sigma$, to investigate their location on the $it M_{rm BH} - sigma$ relation for quiescent galaxies. Due to the strong blending of [S II] with $rm H_{alpha}$, we could estimate $sigma_{[rm SII]}$ of only 123 quasars. We find that the radio-loud quasars do not show a relationship between $it M_{rm BH}$ and $sigma_{rm [SII]/[OIII]}$ up to a redshift of 0.3, although they cluster around the local relation. We find an overall offset of 0.12$pm$0.05 dex of our sample of radio-loud quasars from the $it M_{rm BH} - sigma$ relation of quiescent galaxies. Quasars in our highest redshift bin (z=0.25-0.3) show a deviation of $sim$0.33 $pm$ 0.06 dex with respect to the local relation.
We identified a large sample of radio quasars, including those with complex radio morphology, from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and the Faint Images of Radio Sky at Twenty-cm (FIRST). Using this sample, we inspect previous radio quasar samples
Periodically variable quasars have been suggested as close binary supermassive black holes. We present a systematic search for periodic light curves in 625 spectroscopically confirmed quasars with a median redshift of 1.8 in a 4.6 deg$^2$ overlapping
For the first time spectroscopic galaxy redshift surveys are reaching the scales where galaxies can be studied together with the nearest quasars. This gives an opportunity to study the dependence between the activity of a quasar and its environment i
We have combined a sample of 44984 quasars, selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 3, with the FIRST radio survey. Using a novel technique where the optical quasar position is matched to the complete radio environment within 4
We present new and archival Chandra snapshot (10 ks each) observations of 15 optically identified (from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, SDSS) Type 2 quasars at z=0.40-0.73. When combined with existing X-ray data, this work provides complete X-ray cover