Spectral Measurements of DR9 BOSS Quasars

Here I provide the continuum and emission line properties from spectral fits to all DR9 BOSS quasars, which can be treated as an extension of the DR7 Quasar Property Catalog in Shen et al. (2011, ApJS, 194, 45).

The fits file containing the measurements can be downloaded here.

If you want statistical studies with a large number of quasars, use some criteria to cut a reliable sample (such as redchi^2, number of line pixels fitted, median S/N, and/or reported measurement uncertainties). However, if you want measurements for specific objects or small samples, always check the QA plot to make sure the fit is OK.

Please read this document carefully before you use these measurements.


In this document:


Fitting method: I used the "global fitting" method described in Shen & Liu (2012, ApJ, 753, 125), which differs from the "local fitting" method in Shen et al. (2011, ApJS, 194, 45). In short, the dereddened (using the CCM Milky Way reddening law and the SFD map), restframe spectrum is fitted with a pseudo-contunuum consisting of a power-law continuum and an Fe II template covering restframe UV and optical for several spectral windows free of major emission lines [no Balmer continuum model is fitted in order to reduce fitting ambiguities]. The pseudo-continuum is then subtracted from the original spectrum, leaving an emission line spectrum, which is then fitted with multiple Gaussians (in logarithmic wavelength space). Four emission line regions were fitted: Hbeta, MgII, CIII] and CIV.

I used the pipeline redshift [z_pipe] as the input systemic redshift (the DR9Q catalog was not yet available when I started the fitting procedure).

Specifically, below are the numbers of Gaussians used for each line:
Hbeta [4862A]: 3 Gaussians (broad Hbeta), 1 Gaussian (narrow Hbeta), 2 Gaussians for [OIII]4959 and [OIII]5007
MgII [2798A]: 2 Gaussians (broad MgII); no narrow line component modelled
CIII] complex [1908A]: 2 Gaussians (broad CIII], centroids of the two Gaussians fixed to be the same, i.e., the model profile of CIII] is forced to be symmetric; this is to reduce fitting ambiguities when decomposing the CIII] complex); 1 Gaussian (Si III]) and 1 Gaussian (Al III), whose widths and velocity shifts are tied together. No narrow line component modelled
CIV [1549A]: 2 Gaussians (broad CIV); no narrow line component modelled

During the fitting, I used a fitmask to mask out pixels that are set as "Bright Sky" in either of the sub-exposures [(OR_MASK AND 2L^23) NE 0], and masked out 5sigma pixels below the 20-pixel boxcar smoothed spectrum to reduce effects of narrow absorption troughs. In addition, during the emission line fit, I used 2 iterations to reject pixels below 3sigma of the previous fit, then refit and replace the previous fit if the reduced chi^2 is smaller [this is to mitigate the effects of narrow absorption troughs, and somewhat improves for broad absorption troughs].

These fitting choices were made to make the automatic fitting routine more robust to noisy spectra with absorptions. Other fitting constraints are identical to those in Shen & Liu (2012).

Here is the Quality Assessment (QA) plot of an example fit (this object 3586-55181-0956 is in DR9 but is replaced by 4221-55443-0830 in DR9Q).

Caption: Upper panel: continuum fit, where the brown line is the power-law continuum, the blue lines are the Fe II template, and the red lines are the pseudo-continuum. Bottom panels: emission line fits. The red lines are the total model, and the magenta line in the CIII] panel is Si III]+Al III. The cyan points are pixels that are masked out during the fit.


Error estimation: To estimate the uncertanities of compiled continuum and emission line properties from the multiple-component model fits, I used the Monte Carlo mock spectra method described in Shen et al. (2011) and Shen & Liu (2012). This method takes into account both statistical errors due to spectral noise and ambiguities in decomposing the lines. See these two papers for discussions on this method. I only used 10 mock spectra (instead of 50) in order to speed up the process.

The error estimation is still in progress (it takes 10 times longer than fitting the original ~87,800 spectra), so all the error terms are currently empty in the fits file. Will update it when this procedure is completed.


Caveats:

  1. Continuum slope and flux amplitude are not accurate, due to the known flux calibration issue of BOSS quasars.
  2. For a tiny fraction of objects (<<1%) the global continuum model is not a good prescription even if there is no BAL trough present. This is possibly caused by unusual intrinsic continuum shape, or data reduction problems. The conti_redchi2 will be large for these objects. As a result the emission line fit will fail too.
  3. Objects with severe BAL troughs are often fit badly (both for continuum fits and emission line fits), albeit in many cases the fit seems OK (see the above example). The PCA results are probably better for these heavily absorbed objects.
  4. The FeII emission around CIV is mostly constrained by wavelength regions up to MgII. Thus for a small number of high-z objects with only CIV coverage, the FeII template may be mismatched and may lead to incorrect power-law continuum level. For this reason, for 3422 objects with z_pipe>3.5 [i.e., no wavelength coverage beyond restframe ~2200A], the spectrum is fit without the UV Fe II template.
  5. In very rare cases, the input systemic redshift [z_pipe] is very wrong, and as a result the spectral fit will fail. I plan to fix this for DR10 by using the visual inspection redshift [z_VI] as input systemic redshift.
  6. Measurement errors not populated yet [see Error estimation].

Compiled properties: Gray entries were copied from DR9Q (Paris et al. 2012) and others are my measurements.

Tag Format Description
SDSS_NAME STRING SDSS designation hhmmss.ss+ddmmss.s (J2000.0); inherited from DR9Q
RA DOUBLE Right ascension in decimal degrees (J2000.0)
DEC DOUBLE Declination in decimal degrees (J2000.0)
PLATE LONG Plate number
FIBER LONG Fiber ID
MJD LONG MJD of spectroscopic observation
Z_PIPE DOUBLE BOSS pipeline redshift; inherited from DR9Q
Z_VI DOUBLE Visual inspection redshift; inherited from DR9Q
Z_PCA DOUBLE PCA fit redshift; inherited from DR9Q
FWHM_CIV_FPG DOUBLE PCA CIV FWHM; inherited from DR9Q
REW_CIV_FPG DOUBLE PCA CIV restframe equivalent width; inherited from DR9Q
REW_CIV_ERR_FPG DOUBLE Error in CIV restframe EW; inherited from DR9Q
FWHM_MGII_FPG DOUBLE PCA MgII FWHM; inherited from DR9Q
REW_MGII_FPG DOUBLE PCA MgII restframe equivalent width; inherited from DR9Q
REW_MGII_ERR_FPG DOUBLE Error in MgII restframe EW; inherited from DR9Q
FWHM_CIV DOUBLE CIV FWHM
FWHM_CIV_ERR DOUBLE Error in CIV FWHM
REW_CIV DOUBLE CIV restframe equivalent width
REW_CIV_ERR DOUBLE Error in CIV EW
VOFF_CIV DOUBLE CIV centroid velocity offset relative to systemic [z_pipe]; positive values mean blueshift; null values are -3d5
VOFF_CIV_ERR DOUBLE Error in VOFF_CIV
LOGF_CIV DOUBLE CIV emission line flux; in units of ergs/s/cm^2
LOGF_CIV_ERR DOUBLE Error in LOGF_CIV
FWHM_CIII DOUBLE CIII] FWHM from spectral fit
FWHM_CIII_ERR DOUBLE Error in CIII] FWHM
REW_CIII DOUBLE CIII] restframe equivalent width
REW_CIII_ERR DOUBLE Error in CIII] EW
VOFF_CIII DOUBLE CIII] centroid velocity offset relative to systemic [z_pipe]; positive values mean blueshift; null values are -3d5
VOFF_CIII_ERR DOUBLE Error in VOFF_CIII
LOGF_CIII DOUBLE CIII] emission line flux; in units of ergs/s/cm^2
LOGF_CIII_ERR DOUBLE Error in LOGF_CIII
FWHM_ALIII DOUBLE Al III FWHM; same as the FWHM for Si III]
FWHM_ALIII_ERR DOUBLE Error in FWHM_ALIII
REW_ALIII DOUBLE Al III restframe equivalent width
REW_ALIII_ERR DOUBLE Error in Al III EW
VOFF_ALIII DOUBLE Al III centroid velocity offset relative to systemic [z_pipe]; positive values mean blueshift; null values are -3d5; same as that for Si III]
VOFF_ALIII_ERR DOUBLE Error in VOFF_ALIII
LOGF_ALIII DOUBLE Al III emission line flux; in units of ergs/s/cm^2
LOGF_ALIII_ERR DOUBLE Error in LOGF_ALIII
REW_SIIII DOUBLE Si III] restframe equivalent width
REW_SIIII_ERR DOUBLE Error in Si III] EW
LOGF_SIIII DOUBLE Si III] emission line flux; in units of ergs/s/cm^2
LOGF_SIIII_ERR DOUBLE Error in LOGF_SIIII
FWHM_MGII DOUBLE MgII FWHM
FWHM_MGII_ERR DOUBLE Error in MgII FWHM
REW_MGII DOUBLE MgII restframe equivalent width
REW_MGII_ERR DOUBLE Error in MgII EW
VOFF_MGII DOUBLE MgII centroid velocity offset relative to systemic [z_pipe]; positive values mean blueshift; null values are -3d5
VOFF_MGII_ERR DOUBLE Error in VOFF_MGII
LOGF_MGII DOUBLE MgII emission line flux; in units of ergs/s/cm^2
LOGF_MGII_ERR DOUBLE Error in LOGF_MGII
FWHM_BROAD_HB DOUBLE Broad Hbeta FWHM
FWHM_BROAD_HB_ERR DOUBLE Error in broad Hbeta FWHM
REW_BROAD_HB DOUBLE Broad Hbeta restframe equivalent width
REW_BROAD_HB_ERR DOUBLE Error in broad Hbeta EW
VOFF_BROAD_HB DOUBLE Broad Hbeta centroid velocity offset relative to systemic [z_pipe]; positive values mean blueshift; null values are -3d5
VOFF_BROAD_HB_ERR DOUBLE Error in VOFF_BROAD_HB
LOGF_BROAD_HB DOUBLE Broad Hbeta emission line flux; in units of ergs/s/cm^2
LOGF_BROAD_HB_ERR DOUBLE Error in LOGF_BROAD_HB
REW_NARROW_HB DOUBLE Narrow Hbeta restframe equivalent width
REW_NARROW_HB_ERR DOUBLE Error in REW_NARROW_HB
LOGF_NARROW_HB DOUBLE Narrow Hbeta emission line flux; in units of ergs/s/cm^2
LOGF_NARROW_HB_ERR DOUBLE Error in LOGF_NARROW_HB
FWHM_OIII_5007 DOUBLE [OIII] FWHM; tied to that of narrow Hbeta
FWHM_OIII_5007_ERR DOUBLE Error in FWHM_OIII_5007
REW_OIII_5007 DOUBLE [OIII]5007 restframe equivalent width
REW_OIII_5007_ERR DOUBLE Error in REW_OIII_5007
LOGF_OIII_5007 DOUBLE [OIII]5007 emission line flux; in units of ergs/s/cm^2
LOGF_OIII_5007_ERR DOUBLE Error in LOGF_OIII_5007
VOFF_OIII_5007 DOUBLE [OIII]5007 centroid velocity offset relative to systemic [z_pipe]; positive values mean blueshift; null values are -3d5
VOFF_OIII_5007_ERR DOUBLE Error in VOFF_OIII_5007
LOGF1350 DOUBLE monochromatic flux at restframe 1350A; in units of erg/s/cm^2
LOGF1350_ERR DOUBLE Error in LOGF1350
LOGF3000 DOUBLE monochromatic flux at restframe 3000A; in units of erg/s/cm^2
LOGF3000_ERR DOUBLE Error in LOGF3000
LOGF5100 DOUBLE monochromatic flux at restframe 5100A; in units of erg/s/cm^2
LOGF5100_ERR DOUBLE Error in LOGF5100
CONTI_FIT DOUBLE[2] Power-law continuum P[0]*(lambda/3000)^P[1]; P[0] in units of 1d-17 erg/s/cm^2/A
CONTI_FIT_ERR DOUBLE[2] Errors of conti_fit, directly output from the chi^2 fit
CONTI_REDCHI2 DOUBLE Reduced chi^2 from the continuum fit
CONTI_STATUS LONG 0=not fitted
LINE_REDCHI2 DOUBLE Reduced chi^2 from the emission line fit
LINE_STATUS LONG 0=not fitted
LINE_NPIX_HB LONG Number of fitted pixels (i.e., fitmask=1) within [4700,5100]A; Hbeta
LINE_NPIX_MGII LONG Number of fitted pixels (i.e., fitmask=1) within [2700,2900]A; MgII
LINE_NPIX_CIII LONG Number of fitted pixels (i.e., fitmask=1) within [1820,1970]A; Al III, Si III] and CIII]
LINE_NPIX_CIV LONG Number of fitted pixels (i.e., fitmask=1) within [1500,1600]A; CIV

Important notes:

  1. Why are these spectral fits needed as we already have the pipeline emission line fits? This is because the pipeline fits were using simple recipes for the local continuum and emission line, and usually do not provide accurate description of the line profile. However, in many cases we need to reproduce the line profile as closely as possible and get properties such as EW and FWHM right. This is crucial, for example, for computing virial BH mass estimates using broad line FWHM.
  2. Input systemic redshifts [z_sys] are the pipeline redshifts [z_pipe], because the DR9Q catalog was not yet available when I started the fitting. Velocity offset and FWHMs are in units of km/s, EWs are in units of A, and fluxes are in units of erg/s/cm^2.
  3. To select objects with good fits, I'd suggest to make a redchi2 cuts on both continuum fit and line fit (e.g., plot the distribution of redchi2, and cut at some threshold value, such as 0<redchi2<2). I'd also suggest to reject measurements where the errors are large (you will have to wait for the errors become available). But keep in mind that some very high S/N objects with large redchi2 could still be reasonable fits. If your sample is small, you should always check the QA plots for all objects in your sample.
  4. All fits have QA plots, but unfortunately I don't have enough web space to host these files [3.5G gzipped]. If you have a small subsample and want to check how good the fits are, ask me for a gzipped file containing the QA plots for the subsample of quasars (should be less than 1000 objects).
  5. Fluxes (continuum and line) are already scaled by 1+z_sys, so to compute luminosity, logL [erg/s]=logf + log(4*pi*d_L^2), where d_L is the luminosity distance computed using z_sys. Note that the continuum flux is already multiplied by restwavelength lambda.
  6. To get power-law continuum luminosity at arbitrary rest wavelength lambda, simply do, logL_lambda [erg/s]= log[conti_fit[0]*(lambda/3000)^conti_fit[1]*1d-17*lambda*(1+z_sys)] + log(4*pi*d_L^2). However, the uncertainty of the continuum luminosity at arbitrary rest wavelength is not calculated using mock spectra. To estimate its uncertainty, you can use the reported errors in conti_fit[0] and conti_fit[1] and propagate errors assuming they are independent (this is an approximation because the errors in conti_fit[0] and conti_fit[1] are certainly correlated).
  7. This global fitting recipe is different from the local fitting recipe in the value-added catalog in Shen et al. (2011, ApJS), but in most cases the difference is negligible. One noticeable difference is that CIV EW with the global fitting recipe is on average 0.06 dex larger than those in Shen et al. (2011) for the common DR7 quasars. Reasons for this difference: 1) I am fitting Fe II undernearth CIV for BOSS DR9 quasars, which lowers the power-law continuum [this effect contributes ~0.03 dex systematic offset in CIV EW]; 2) the difference between the global power-law continuum (i.e., more curved continuum undernearth CIV for the global fit) and the local power-law continuum fits [contributes another ~0.03 dex systematic offset in CIV EW]. Nevertheless, CIV FWHM is fully consistent with those in Shen et al. (2011) with a median offset of only 0.01 dex. Note that there is merit in both "local-continuum" and "global-continuum" fitting methods: the former eliminates bad global continuum fits in many objects, while the latter arguably provides a better estimate of the true continuum level undernearth the emission lines.
  8. I tested fitting additional He II 1640 and OIII] 1663 emission and found their effect on CIV EW is negligible. This is because I am fitting CIV within [1500,1600], and the contribution from the bluewing of He II is not significant.
  9. There are inevitably failed fits even if the spectrum looks OK, although such cases are rare. I have experimented ways to reduce junk fits as much as possible, but I can't gurantee that I have eliminated them all.
  10. If you wish to use these fits to search for rare outliers with extreme spectral properties, please be advised that many of these outliers you find are most likely junk fits. So once again, you should check the QA plots for these "extreme" objects.

Comparison with the PCA results in Paris et al. (2012). I only compare CIV and MgII below, because CIII] is fitted in very different ways in both approaches.

CIV: although generally the two sets of measurements are similar, there are some notable differences. The FWHMs have a slight tilt between my results and the PCA results. The CIV EW comparison also has a tilt, and on average the PCA results are ~0.1 dex lower than my results. We have investigated this discrepancy on CIV EW and here are the reasons: 1) the fits in Paris et al. (2012) is a similar "local-continuum" fit as in Shen et al. (2011), but the CIV EW was computed within the [1500,1600] window. While in Shen et al. (2011) the CIV EW was computed from the line model fit, which can extend beyond the [1500,1600] window. This causes a systematic ~0.04 dex underestimation of the CIV EWs in Paris et al. 2) The current fits depoly a "global-continuum" fit with Fe II around the CIV region. This introduces another ~0.06 dex average increase in CIV EW compared to those in Shen et al. (2011) [see Item 7 in "Important Notes" above]. Nevertheless, this ~0.1 dex offset is not crucial for most studies.

MgII: Both FWHMs and EWs seem to be in good agreement between the Paris et al. results and my measurements.


Some quick plots

Caption: Left: The CIV Baldwin effect. Right: CIV FWHM against CIII] FWHM from my fits. The two FWHMs are correlated with each other, consistent with the findings in Shen & Liu (2012). This correlation is much better than that of CIV FWHM versus MgII FWHM (or broad Balmer line FWHM).

Caption: Flux ratio of CIII] to Si III] and Al III, as a function of CIV-CIII] blueshift. There is some indication that the relative flux ratio of Si III] and Al III to CIII] increases when CIV is more blueshifted (see Richards et al. 2011). In general the CIII]-MgII blueshift is much less than the CIV-MgII blueshift if the CIII] complex is decomposed properly.


Last modified: Sep 2012 by Yue Shen