Bibcode
DOI
Binette, Luc; Magris C., Gladis; Krongold, Yair; Morisset, Christophe; Haro-Corzo, Sinhue; de Diego, Jose Antonio; Mutschke, Harald; Andersen, Anja C.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 631, Issue 2, pp. 661-677.
Advertised on:
10
2005
Journal
Citations
24
Refereed citations
17
Description
We explore the possibility that the steepening observed shortward of
1000 Å in the energy distribution of quasars may result from
absorption by dust, being either intrinsic to the quasar environment or
intergalactic. We find that a dust extinction curve consisting of
nanodiamonds, composed of terrestrial cubic diamonds or with surface
impurities as found in carbonaceous chondrite meteorites, such as
Allende, is successful in reproducing the sharp break observed. The
intergalactic dust model is partially successful in explaining the shape
of the composite energy distribution but must be discarded in the end,
as the amount of crystalline dust required is unreasonable and would
imply an improbable fine-tuning among the dust formation processes. The
alternative intrinsic dust model requires a mixture of both cubic
diamonds and Allende nanodiamonds and provides a better fit of the UV
break. The gas column densities implied are of the order 1020
cm-2, assuming solar metallicity for carbon and full
depletion of carbon into dust. The absorption only occurs in the
ultraviolet and is totally negligible in the visible. The minimum dust
mass required is of the order ~0.003r2pc
Msolar, where rpc is the distance in parsecs
between the dust screen and the continuum source. The intrinsic dust
model reproduces the flux rise observed around 660 Å in key quasar
spectra quite well. We present indirect evidence of a shallow continuum
break near 670 Å (18.5 eV), which would be intrinsic to the quasar
continuum.