Improved redshifts for SDSS quasar spectra
Figure 1: Redshift differences, Delta(z) /(1 + z),
between SDSS and Princeton pipeline reductions.
Spectra plotted possess SDSS final-redshifts with
high-confidence (zConf>0.9) derived via cross-correlation (zstatus=3 or
4). Large differences between redshifts extend to amplitudes of
+/- 5×10−3 (+/- 1500 km/s). Particularly striking is the sequence of
apparent discontinuities in the behaviour of the redshift
differences as a function of redshift. Data for 69 915 spectra are
included (503 lie outside the y-axis range plotted).
Figure 2:
Redshift differences, Delta(z) /(1 + z), between SDSS redshifts and
redshifts derived from the SDSS-determined Mg II emission line
locations. Spectra plotted possess Mg I I emission line SNR>10. The
solid red line, calculated using a 2001-point running median of the
data-points, shows the form of the systematic trends with
redshift. Systematic redshift differences of ~500 km s −1 shifts
over small redshift intervals are evident and, over a larger redshift
interval, a prominent systematic trend of 2×10 −3 (600 km s −1 ) can
be seen. Data for 60 190 spectra are included (2101 lie outside the
y-axis range plotted).
Figure 3:
Redshift differences, Delta(z) /(1 + z ), between HW redshifts and
redshifts derived from the SDSS-determined Mg II emission line locations.
Spectra plotted possess Mg I I emission line SNR>10. The solid red line,
calculated using a 2001-point running median of the data-points, demon-
strates the complete removal of detectable systematic trends with redshift.
Contrast the behaviour with that shown in Fig. 2 . Data for 60 120 spectra
are included (559 lie outside the y-axis range plotted).
Abstract: A systematic investigation of the relationship between different redshift estimation schemes for more than 91000 quasars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 6 is presented. The publicly available SDSS quasar redshifts are shown to possess systematic biases of (600kms-1) over both small and large redshift intervals. Empirical relationships between redshifts based on (i) CaII H&K host galaxy absorption, (ii) quasar [OII]3728, (iii) [OIII]4960, 5008 emission and (iv) cross-correlation (with a master-quasar template) that includes, at increasing quasar redshift, the prominent MgII2799, CIII]1908 and CIV1549 emission lines are established as a function of quasar redshift and luminosity. New redshifts in the resulting catalogue possess systematic biases, a factor of 20 lower compared to the SDSS redshift values; systematic effects are reduced to the level of (30km/s) per unit redshift or per unit absolute magnitude. Redshift errors, including components due both to internal reproducibility and to the intrinsic quasar-to-quasar variation among the population, are available for all quasars in the catalogue. The improved redshifts and their associated errors have wide applicability in areas such as quasar absorption outflows, quasar clustering, quasar-galaxy clustering and proximity-effect determinations.