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FIRST-2MASS Red Quasars: Transitional Objects Emerging from the Dust

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arxiv 1207.2175 v1 pith:ESOUKUTA submitted 2012-07-09 astro-ph.CO

FIRST-2MASS Red Quasars: Transitional Objects Emerging from the Dust

classification astro-ph.CO
keywords quasarsquasarreddeningdustphasebluedust-reddenedluminous
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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We present a sample of 120 dust-reddened quasars identified by matching radio sources detected at 1.4 GHz in the FIRST survey with the near-infrared 2MASS catalog and color-selecting red sources. Optical and/or near-infrared spectroscopy provide broad wavelength sampling of their spectral energy distributions that we use to determine their reddening, characterized by E(B-V). We demonstrate that the reddening in these quasars is best-described by SMC-like dust. This sample spans a wide range in redshift and reddening (0.1 < z < 3, 0.1 < E(B-V) < 1.5), which we use to investigate the possible correlation of luminosity with reddening. At every redshift, dust-reddened quasars are intrinsically the most luminous quasars. We interpret this result in the context of merger-driven quasar/galaxy co-evolution where these reddened quasars are revealing an emergent phase during which the heavily obscured quasar is shedding its cocoon of dust prior to becoming a "normal" blue quasar. When correcting for extinction, we find that, depending on how the parent population is defined, these red quasars make up < 15-20% of the luminous quasar population. We estimate, based on the fraction of objects in this phase, that its duration is 15-20% as long as the unobscured, blue quasar phase.

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Cited by 2 Pith papers

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  1. Extreme outflow velocities and weak UV emission lines indicate quasars shedding their dust cocoons

    astro-ph.GA 2026-07 unverdicted novelty 6.0

    Six z~2-3 quasars with extreme LoBAL outflows and weak UV lines are interpreted as weak-emission-line quasars emerging from dust cocoons via disc winds that shatter grains and produce steeper extinction.

  2. Strong X-ray Variability of I Zwicky 1: Obscuration from Clumpy Accretion-Disk Winds

    astro-ph.HE 2026-05 unverdicted novelty 5.0

    Variable column density and covering factor of three ionized absorbers in clumpy disk winds explain the X-ray variability in I Zw 1 with stable corona.