Orientation effects on the near-infrared broad band emission of quasars

Abstract

We recently proposed the equivalent width (EW) of the narrow [OIII]5007 emission line as an orientation indicator for active galactic nuclei. We tested this method on about 12,300 optically selected broad line quasars from the SDSS 7th Data Release at redshift z < 0.8 and with full width at half-maximum values of broad emission lines (Hα, Hβ, and MgII) larger than 2000 km/s. We now examine their spectral energy distributions (SEDs) using broad band photometry from the near-infrared to the ultraviolet to look for variations in the overall shape as a function of the EW[OIII]. We find that quasars with low EW[OIII] values (close to face-on position) have flatter near-infrared SEDs with respect to sources with high EW[OIII] values (almost edge-on). Moreover, quasars with high EW[OIII] values show a factor of 2 lower emission in the UV to quasars with low EW[OIII] values. Our findings indicate that the torus is clumpy and, on average, co-axial with the accretion disc and broad line region, in agreement with the most recent theoretical models for the obscuring torus.

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