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Modelling the low ionization lines (LIL) in active galactic nuclei still faces problems in explaining the observed equivalent widths (EWs). We examine the optical Fe II and near-infrared Ca II triplet (CaT) emission strengths using the photoionization code CLOUDY. Using an incident continuum for I Zw 1 - a prototypical Type-1 narrow-line Seyfert galaxy, we can recover the line ratios for the optical Fe II (i.e. R$_{rm{Fe II}}$) and the NIR CaT (i.e. R$_{rm{CaT}}$) in agreement to the observed estimates. Although, the pairs of (U,$rm{n_{H}}$) that reproduce the conforming line ratios, unfortunately, do not relate to agreeable line EWs. We thus propose that the LIL region of the BLR cloud doesnt see the same continuum seen by a distant observer that is emanated from the accretion disk, rather it sees a filtered version of the original continuum. The assumption of the filtered continuum as the source of BLR irradiation recovers realistic EWs for LIL species. However, our study finds that to account for the adequate R$_{rm{Fe II}}$ (Fe II/H$beta$ flux ratio) emission, the BLR needs to be selectively overabundant in iron. On the other hand, the R$_{rm{CaT}}$ (CaT/H$beta$ flux ratio) emission spans a broader range from solar to super-solar metallicities. In all these models the BLR cloud density is found to be consistent with our conclusions from prior works, i.e. $rm{n_{H}} sim 10^{12}$ cm$^{-3}$. An interesting result obtained here is the reduction in the value of the metallicity by up to a factor 10 for the R$_{rm{Fe II}}$ cases when the microturbulence is invoked, suggesting that microturbulence can act as an apparent metallicity controller for the Fe II. On the contrary, the R$_{rm{CaT}}$ cases are rather unaffected by the effect of microturbulence.
Optical Fe II emission is a strong feature in quasar spectra originating in the broad-line region (BLR). The difficulty in understanding the complex Fe II pseudo-continuum has led us to search for other reliable, simpler ionic species such as Ca II.
In this second paper in the series, we carefully analyze the observational properties of the optical FeII and NIR CaII triplet in Active Galactic Nuclei, as well as the luminosity, black hole mass, and Eddington ratio in order to define the driving m
We extend our previous calibration of the infrared Ca II triplet as metallicity indicator to the metal-poor regime by including observations of 55 field stars with [Fe/H] down to -4.0 dex. While we previously solved the saturation at high-metallicity
(ABRIDGED) Context. The line strength of the Ca II triplet (CaT) lines are a proxy to measure metallicity from individual stellar spectra of bright red giant stars. It is a mandatory step to remove the magnitude (proxy for gravity, temperature and lu
We present a long-exposure (~10 hr) image of the supernova (SN) remnant Cassiopeia A (Cas A) obtained with the UKIRT 3.8-m telescope using a narrow band filter centered at 1.644 um emission. The passband contains [Fe II] 1.644 um and [Si I] 1.645 um