Fe II Diagnostic Tools for Quasars
Abstract
The enrichment of Fe, relative to alpha-elements such as O and Mg, represents a potential means to determine the age of quasars and probe the galaxy formation epoch. To explore how \ion{Fe}{2} emission in quasars is linked to physical conditions and abundance, we have constructed a 830-level \ion{Fe}{2} model atom and investigated through photoionization calculations how \ion{Fe}{2} emission strengths depend on non-abundance factors. We have split \ion{Fe}{2} emission into three major wavelength bands, \ion{Fe}{2} (UV), \ion{Fe}{2}(Opt1), and \ion{Fe}{2}(Opt2), and explore how the \ion{Fe}{2}(UV)/\ion{Mg}{2}, \ion{Fe}{2}(UV)/\ion{Fe}{2}(Opt1) and \ion{Fe}{2}(UV)/\ion{Fe}{2}(Opt2) emission ratios depend upon hydrogen density and ionizing flux in broad-line regions (BLR's) of quasars. Our calculations show that: 1) similar \ion{Fe}{2}(UV)/\ion{Mg}{2} ratios can exist over a wide range of physical conditions; 2) the \ion{Fe}{2}(UV)/\ion{Fe}{2}(Opt1) and \ion{Fe}{2}(UV)/\ion{Fe}{2}(Opt2) ratios serve to constrain ionizing luminosity and hydrogen density; and 3) flux measurements of \ion{Fe}{2} bands and knowledge of ionizing flux provide tools to derive distances to BLR's in quasars. To derive all BLR physical parameters with uncertainties, comparisons of our model with observations of a large quasar sample at low redshift () is desirable. The STIS and NICMOS spectrographs aboard the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) offer the best means to provide such observations.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.astro-ph/0404593,
title = {Fe II Diagnostic Tools for Quasars},
author = {E. Verner and F. Bruhweiler and D. Verner and S. Johansson and T. Kallman and T. Gull},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:astro-ph/0404593},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
ApJ accepted