Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/141887
Title: A CEERS discovery of an accreting supermassive black hole 570Myr after the Big Bang : identifying a progenitor of massive z>6 quasars
Authors: Larson, Rebecca L.
Finkelstein, Steven L.
Kocevski, Dale D.
Hutchison, Taylor A.
Trump, Jonathan R.
Haro, Pablo Arrabal
Bromm, Volker
Cleri, Nikkol J.
Dickinson, Mark
Fujimoto, Seiji
Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S.
Koekemoer, Anton M.
Papovich, Casey
Pirzkal, Nor
Tacchella, Sandro
Zavala, Jorge A.
Bagley, Micaela
Behroozi, Peter
Champagne, Jaclyn B.
Cole, Justin W.
Jung, Intae
Morales, Alexa M.
Yang, Guang
Zhang, Haowen
Zitrin, Adi
Amorín, Ricardo O.
Burgarella, Denis
Casey, Caitlin M.
Ortiz, Óscar A. Chávez
Cox, Isabella G.
Chworowsky6, Katherine
Fontana, Adriano
Gawiser, Eric
Grazian, Andrea
Grogin, Norman A.
Harish, Santosh
Hathi, Nimish P.
Hirschmann, Michaela
Holwerda, Benne W.
Juneau, Stéphanie
Leung, Gene C. K.
Lucas, Ray A.
McGrath, Elizabeth J.
Pérez-González, Pablo G.
Rigby, Jane R.
Seillé, Lise-Marie
Simons, Raymond C.
de la Vega, Alexander
Weiner, Benjamin J.
Wilkins, Stephen M.
Yung, L. Y. Aaron
Authors: The CEERS Team
Keywords: Black holes (Astronomy)
Active galactic nuclei
Quasars
Cosmology
Galaxies -- Formation
Infrared astronomy
Issue Date: 2023
Publisher: Institute of Physics Publishing Ltd.
Citation: Larson, R. L., Finkelstein, S. L., Kocevski, D. D., Hutchison, T. A., Trump, J. R., Haro, P. A.,...Yung, L. Y. A. (2023). A CEERS discovery of an accreting supermassive black hole 570 Myr after the big bang: Identifying a progenitor of massive z> 6 quasars. The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 953(2), L29, 1-26.
Abstract: We report the discovery of an accreting supermassive black hole at z = 8.679. This galaxy, denoted here as CEERS_1019, was previously discovered as a Lyα-break galaxy by Hubble with a Lyα redshift from Keck. As part of the Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science (CEERS) survey, we have observed this source with JWST/NIRSpec, MIRI, NIRCam, and NIRCam/WFSS and uncovered a plethora of emission lines. The Hβ line is best fit by a narrow plus a broad component, where the latter is measured at 2.5σ with an FWHM ∼1200 km s−1. We conclude this originates in the broadline region of an active galactic nucleus (AGN). This is supported by the presence of weak high-ionization lines (N V, N IV], and C III]), as well as a spatial point-source component. The implied mass of the black hole (BH) is log (MBH/M⊙) = 6.95 ± 0.37, and we estimate that it is accreting at 1.2 ± 0.5 times the Eddington limit. The 1–8 μm photometric spectral energy distribution shows a continuum dominated by starlight and constrains the host galaxy to be massive (log M/M⊙ ∼9.5) and highly star-forming (star formation rate, or SFR ∼ 30 M⊙ yr−1; log sSFR ∼ − 7.9 yr−1). The line ratios show that the gas is metal-poor (Z/Z⊙ ∼ 0.1), dense (ne ∼ 103 cm−3), and highly ionized (log U ∼ − 2.1). We use this present highest-redshift AGN discovery to place constraints on BH seeding models and find that a combination of either super-Eddington accretion from stellar seeds or Eddington accretion from very massive BH seeds is required to form this object.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/141887
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - InsSSA



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