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Unveiling the structure of the Broad-Line Region(BLR)of AGNs is critical to understand the quasar phenomenon.Resolving a few BLRs by optical interferometry will bring decisive information to confront,complement and calibrate the reverberation mapping technique,basis of the mass-luminosity relation in quasars.BLRs are much smaller than the angular resolution of the VLT and Keck interferometers and they can be resolved only by differential interferometry very accurate measurements of differential visibility and phase as a function of wavelength.The latter yields the photocenter variation with wavelength,and constrains the size,position and velocity law of various regions of the BLR.AGNs are below the magnitude limit for spectrally resolved interferometry set by currently available fringe trackers.A new “blind” observation method and a data processing based on the accumulation of 2D Fourier power and cross spectra permitted us to obtain the first spectrally resolved interferometric observation of a BLR,on the K=10 quasar 3C273.A careful bias analysis is still in progress,but we report strong evidence that,as the baseline increases,the differential visibility decreases in the Paschen-alpha line.Combined with a differential phase smaller than 3°,this yields an angular equivalent radius of the BLR larger than 0.4 milliarcseconds,or 1000 light days at the distance of 3C273,much larger than the reverberation mapping radius of 300 light days.Explaining the coexistence of these two different sizes,and possibly structures and mechanisms,implies very new insights into the BLR of 3C273.