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AllBRICQS: The All-sky BRIght, Complete Quasar Survey

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 February 2023

Christopher A. Onken*
Affiliation:
Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
Christian Wolf
Affiliation:
Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia Centre for Gravitational Astrophysics, Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2600, Australia
Wei Jeat Hon
Affiliation:
School of Physics, University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC 3010, Australia
Samuel Lai (賴民希)
Affiliation:
Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
Patrick Tisserand
Affiliation:
Sorbonne Universités, UPMC Univ Paris 6 et CNRS, Institut d’Astrophysique de Paris, 98 bis bd Arago, F-75014 Paris, France
Rachel Webster
Affiliation:
School of Physics, University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC 3010, Australia
*
Corresponding author: Christopher A. Onken, Email: christopher.onken@anu.edu.au.
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Abstract

We describe the first results from the All-sky BRIght, Complete Quasar Survey (AllBRICQS), which aims to discover the last remaining optically bright quasars. We present 156 spectroscopically confirmed quasars (140 newly identified) having $|b|>10^{\circ}$. 152 of the quasars have Gaia DR3 magnitudes brighter than $B_{P}=16.5$ or $R_{P}=16$ mag, while four are slightly fainter. The quasars span a redshift range of $z=0.07-3.93$. In particular, we highlight the properties of J0529-4351 at $z=3.93$, which, if unlensed, is one of the most intrinsically luminous quasars in the Universe. The AllBRICQS sources have been selected by combining data from the Gaia and WISE all-sky satellite missions, and we successfully identify quasars not flagged as candidates by Gaia Data Release 3. We expect the completeness to be $\approx$96% within our magnitude and latitude limits, while the preliminary results indicate a selection purity of $\approx$96%. The optical spectroscopy used for source classification will also enable detailed quasar characterisation, including black hole mass measurements and identification of foreground absorption systems. The AllBRICQS sources will greatly enhance the number of quasars available for high-signal-to-noise follow-up with present and future facilities.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Astronomical Society of Australia
Figure 0

Figure 1. Left panel: WISE$W1-W2$ colour versus Gaia$B_{P}$ magnitude of objects with low parallax and proper motion (yellow); known quasars are shown in black or, if they violate our selection criterion, in grey. Centre panel: $W1-W2$ colour versus redshift for known quasars satisfying (black) or violating (grey) our selection criteria. Right panel: $W1-W2$ colour versus $B_{P}$ magnitude for objects with low PPM in yellow, the new AllBRICQS quasars in black, contaminating stars in cyan, unclassified spectra in blue, and unobserved candidates in red.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Number counts of AllBRICQS candidates (dark grey) as a function of Gaia$B_{P}$ magnitude (left), declination (centre), and Galactic latitude (right). The blue histograms are known quasars for the same magnitude range as the candidates: Gaia$B_{P}<16.5$ or $R_{P}<16$ mag. Light grey are all known quasars.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Bolometric luminosity versus redshift for the first AllBRICQS quasars (red circles), with the highest-redshift source (J0529-4351; see Section 5) indicated as a red star. The AllBRICQS discoveries that are fainter than $B_{P}=16.5$ and $R_{P}=16$ mag are indicated with open orange diamonds. For comparison, we also show 3C 273 (blue square); the recently discovered J1144-4308 (green star; Onken et al. 2022a); the most luminous known quasar, J2157-3602 (magenta star; Wolf et al. 2018a; Onken et al. 2020); and the numerous quasars observed by SDSS grey points; (grey points; Rakshit et al. 2020). The AllBRICQS quasars improve our knowledge of the luminous end of the quasar distribution across a wide redshift range.

Figure 3

Figure 4. Flux versus wavelength for the $R\sim3000$ spectrum of AllBRICQS (black line) and the Gaia low-resolution $B_{P}/R_{P}$ spectral reconstruction (blue points with errorbars) for four example quasars. Top labels indicate the AllBRICQS redshift as well as the Gaia classifications (contained in GLEAN or other variability samples, and/or a DSC-labelled quasar). Vertical lines indicate the positions of various quasar emissions lines: H$\alpha$ (red, dashed), H$\beta$ (orange, dot-dashed), Mg ii (green, dotted), C iii] (blue, solid), C iv (purple, dashed). The thin, black vertical line at 5575 Å indicates where the blue and red arms of the WiFeS spectrograph are spliced together. The Gaia spectra broaden and blend spectral features, which complicates the efforts to classify the sources and determine redshifts, let alone any more detailed analysis.

Figure 4

Table A.1. Confirmed AllBRICQS quasars.

Figure 5

Figure B.1. WiFeS spectra of the AllBRICQS sample, shown with increasing redshift. The y-axis hows the flux on a logarithmic scale, normalised using Gaia DR3 photometry. Vertical lines indicate the positions of various quasar emissions lines: H$\alpha$ (red, dashed), H$\beta$ (orange, dot-dashed), Mg ii (green, dotted), C iii] (blue, solid), C iv (purple, dashed). The thin, black vertical line at 5575 Å indicates where the blue and red arms of the spectrograph are spliced together.

Figure 6

Figure B.2. As in Figure B.1.

Figure 7

Figure B.3. As in Figure B.1.

Figure 8

Figure B.4. As in Figure B.1.

Figure 9

Figure B.5. As in Figure B.1.

Figure 10

Figure B.6. As in Figure B.1.

Figure 11

Figure B.7. As in Figure B.1.

Figure 12

Figure B.8. As in Figure B.1.

Figure 13

Figure B.9. As in Figure B.1.

Figure 14

Figure B.10. As in Figure B.1.

Figure 15

Figure B.11. As in Figure B.1.

Figure 16

Figure B.12. As in Figure B.1.

Figure 17

Figure B.13. As in Figure B.1.

Figure 18

Table C.1. Unidentified AllBRICQS sources.

Figure 19

Figure C.1. WiFeS spectra of the unclassified sources observed in AllBRICQS. The y-axis shows the flux on a logarithmic scale, normalised using their Gaia DR3 photometry. The thin, black vertical line at 5575 Å indicates where the blue and red arms of the spectrograph are spliced together.

Figure 20

Table D.1. AllBRICQS stars.

Figure 21

Figure D.1. WiFeS spectra of the stars observed in AllBRICQS. The y-axis shows the flux on a logarithmic scale, normalised using their Gaia DR3 photometry. The thin, black vertical line at 5575 Å indicates where the blue and red arms of the spectrograph are spliced together.

Figure 22

Table E.1. AllBRICQS quasar luminosities.