A quasar-galaxy mixing diagram: Quasar spectral energy distribution shapes in the optical to near-infrared

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Abstract

We define a quasar-galaxy mixing diagram using the slopes of their spectral energy distributions (SEDs) from 1 μm to 3000 å and from 1 to 3 μm in the rest frame. The mixing diagram can easily distinguish among quasar-dominated, galaxy-dominated and reddening-dominated SED shapes. By studying the position of the 413 XMM-selected type 1 AGN in the wide-field 'Cosmic Evolution Survey' in the mixing diagram, we find that a combination of the Elvis et al. mean quasar SED with various contributions from galaxy emission and some dust reddening is remarkably effective in describing the SED shape from 0.3 to 3μm for large ranges of redshift, luminosity, black hole mass and Eddington ratio of type 1 AGN. In particular, the location in the mixing diagram of the highest luminosity AGN is very close (within 1σ) to that of the Elvis et al. SED template. The mixing diagram can also be used to estimate the host galaxy fraction and reddening in quasar. We also show examples of some outliers which might be AGN in different evolutionary stages compared to the majority of AGN in the quasar-host galaxy co-evolution cycle. © 2013 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society.

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Hao, H., Elvis, M., Bongiorno, A., Zamorani, G., Merloni, A., Kelly, B. C., … Schawinski, K. (2013). A quasar-galaxy mixing diagram: Quasar spectral energy distribution shapes in the optical to near-infrared. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 434(4), 3104–3121. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stt1228

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