posted on 2015-01-21, 16:53authored byConor Wildy, Michael R. Goad, J. T. Allen
We report on the highly variable Si iv and C iv broad absorption lines in SDSS
J113831.4+351725.2 across four observational epochs. Using the Si iv doublet components,
we find that the blue component is usually saturated and non-black, with the ratio
of optical depths between the two components rarely being 2:1. This indicates that
these absorbers do not fully cover the line-of-sight and thus a simple apparent optical
depth model is insufficient when measuring the true opacity of the absorbers. Tests
with inhomogeneous (power-law) and pure-partial coverage (step-function) models of
the absorbing Si iv optical depth predict the most un-blended doublet’s component
profiles equally well. However, when testing with Gaussian-fitted doublet components
to all Si iv absorbers and averaging the total absorption predicted in each doublet, the
upper limit of the power law index is mostly unconstrained. This leads us to favour
pure partial coverage as a more accurate measure of the true optical depth than the
inhomogeneous power law model.
The pure-partial coverage model indicates no significant change in covering fraction
across the epochs, with changes in the incident ionizing flux on the absorbing
gas instead being favoured as the variability mechanism. This is supported by (a) the
coordinated behaviour of the absorption troughs, (b) the behaviour of the continuum
at the blue end of the spectrum and (c) the consistency of photoionization simulations
of ionic column density dependencies on ionization parameter with the observed
variations. Evidence from the simulations together with the C iv absorption profile indicates
that the absorber lies outside the broad line region, though the precise distance
and kinetic luminosity are not well constrained.
Funding
Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC)
History
Citation
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (April 11, 2015) 448 (3): 2397-2411.
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (April 11
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP) for Royal Astronomical Society