PHL 1811: The Local Prototype of the Lineless High-z SDSS QSOs

Abstract

Abridged) In the SDSS, several unusual QSOs have been discovered that have very blue rest-frame UV spectra but no discernible emission lines. Their UV spectra strongly resemble that of the newly discovered quasar PHL 1811 (z=0.192; MV=-25.9). With magnitudes of B = 14.4 and R = 14.1, PHL 1811 is the second brightest quasar known with z>0.1 after 3C 273. Optically it is classified as a Narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy (NLS1). Objects of this class are generally strong soft X-ray emitters, but a BeppoSAX observation of PHL 1811 showed that it is anomalously X-ray weak. The inferred αox was 1.9--2.1, much steeper than the nominal value of 1.6 for quasars of this optical luminosity, and comparable to the X-ray weakest quasars. Follow-up Chandra observations reveal a variable, unabsorbed X-ray spectrum and confirm that it is intrinsically X-ray weak.

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