We present the first intermediate-resolution (l/Dl ϭ 3000) spectrum of the bright quasi-stellar object 3C 273 at wavelengths between 900 and 1200 Å . Observations were performed with the Berkeley spectrograph aboard the ORFEUS II mission. We detect Lyb counterparts to intergalactic Lya features identified by Morris and coworkers at cz ϭ 19,900, 1600, and 1000 km s ; counterparts to other putative Lya clouds along the sight Ϫ1 line are below our detection limit. The strengths of the two very low redshift Lyb features, which are believed to arise in Virgo intracluster gas, exceed preflight expectations (Weymann and coworkers), suggesting that the previous determination of the cloud parameters may underestimate the true column densities. A curve-of-growth analysis sets a minimum H i column density of 4 # 10 14 cm for the 1600 km s cloud. We find marginally Ϫ2 Ϫ1 significant evidence for Galactic H along the sight line, with a total column density of about 10 15 cm . We Ϫ2 2 detect the stronger interstellar O vi doublet member unambiguously; the weaker member is blended with other features. If the Doppler b-value for O vi is comparable to that determined for N v by Sembach and collaborators, then the O vi column density is (7 ע 2) # 10 14 cm , significantly above the only previous estimate, by Davidsen.
Ϫ2The O vi/N v ratio is about 10, consistent with the low end of the range observed in the disk, as shown in the compilation by Hurwitz & Bowyer. Additional interstellar species detected for the first time toward 3C 273 (at modest statistical significance) include P ii, Fe iii, Ar i, and S iii.
Abstract. During the second flight of the ORFEUS-SPAS mission in November/December 1996, the Echelle spectrometer was used extensively by the Principal and Guest Investigator teams as one of the two focal plane instruments of the ORFEUS telescope. We present the inflight performance and the principles of the data reduction for this instrument. The wavelength range is 90 nm to 140 nm, the spectral resolution is significantly better than λ/∆λ = 10 000, where ∆λ is measured as FWHM of the instrumental profile. The effective area peaks at 1.3 cm 2 near 110 nm. The background is dominated by straylight from the Echelle grating and is about 15% in an extracted spectrum for spectra with a rather flat continuum. The internal accuracy of the wavelength calibration is better than ± 0.005 nm.
Using the Berkeley spectrometer of the ORFEUS-SPAS II mission, we observed the spectrum of the bright, low-redshift QSO 3C 273 in the wavelength range 900-1200 Å (780-1040 Å in the QSO's rest frame). The QSO's spectrum is dominated by broad emission blends of the resonance lines of O vi, C iii, N iii, and S vi. Only relatively weak emission is detected at the wavelengths of the higher Lyman lines, and no significant Lyman discontinuity is present at the QSO's redshift. The reddening-corrected underlying smooth continuum shows (for the epoch of the ORFEUS observations) a turnover of the spectrum at about Hz. While this 15 nF 2.5 # 10 n turnover frequency is in the general range expected for active galactic nucleus accretion disks, it is lower than predicted for QSOs as luminous as 3C 273 by standard accretion disk models.
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