Discovery of a Radio-loud Narrow-line Seyfert 1 Galaxy at z = 0.9 Reddened with a Strong 2175 Å Bump
Jin, Chichuan; Hao, Lei; Ji, Tuo; Shi, Xiheng; Pan, Xiang; Jiang, Peng; Wang, Yibo; Zheng, Zhenya; Yang, Chenwei; Sun, Luming; Liu, Wenjuan; Zhou, Yipeng; Dai, Xuejie; Huang, Xiangning; Xiong, Yifei
China
Abstract
We present a broadband spectrophotometric analysis of an unusual quasar, SDSS J160558.86+474300.1, at z = 0.9, found in a systematic search for reddened radio-loud narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxies (NLS1s). J1605+4743 qualifies for the conventional definition of an NLS1 in its permitted emission line widths and Hβ/[O III] flux ratio. It also shows strong Fe II emissions. J1605+4743 has a steep radio spectrum. With a radio loudness of ~150 (70) before (after) reddening correction, it is among the most radio-loud NLS1s discovered. In addition, the blueshifted emission lines are also found to be weak, suggesting that it can be an exotic "wind-dominated" Seyfert similar to weak-line quasars, especially the ones with strong reddening. As an extreme hybrid central engine, its environment and host galaxy become rather intriguing. We discover in it a proximate 2175 Å absorber with a bump strength similar to the average value of 2175 Å absorbers in the Milky Way, which we suspect can be intrinsic to the quasar. In addition, the quasar seems to have enhanced instead of suppressed star formation at a rate of ≳94 M ⊙ yr-1. The combination of these unusual properties, i.e., the unique extinction, strong Fe II and [O II] lines, weak [O III], Mg II, and Balmer lines, and large radio loudness, might hold important clues to accretion physics, the formation/destruction of dust grains in the environment of active galactic nuclei, and possibly also the coevolution of supermassive black holes and their host galaxies in general.