Under the unified model for active galactic nuclei (AGNs), narrow-line (Type
2) AGNs are, in fact, broad-line (Type 1) AGNs but each with a heavily obscured
accretion disk. We would therefore expect the optical continuum emission from
Type 2 AGN to be composed mainly of stellar light and non-variable on the
time-scales of months to years. In this work we probe the spectroscopic
variability of galaxies and narrow-line AGNs using the multi-epoch data in the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 6. The sample contains 18,435
sources for which there exist pairs of spectroscopic observations (with a
maximum separation in time of ~700 days) covering a wavelength range of
3900-8900 angstrom. To obtain a reliable repeatability measurement between each
spectral pair, we consider a number of techniques for spectrophotometric
calibration resulting in an improved spectrophotometric calibration of a factor
of two. From these data we find no obvious continuum and emission-line
variability in the narrow-line AGNs on average -- the spectroscopic variability
of the continuum is 0.07+/-0.26 mag in the g band and, for the emission-line
ratios log10([NII]/Halpha) and log10([OIII]/Hbeta), the variability is
0.02+/-0.03 dex and 0.06+/-0.08 dex, respectively. From the continuum
variability measurement we set an upper limit on the ratio between the flux of
varying spectral component, presumably related to AGN activities, and that of
host galaxy to be ~30%. We provide the corresponding upper limits for other
spectral classes, including those from the BPT diagram, eClass galaxy
classification, stars and quasars.Comment: AJ accepte