Evidence for non-evolving FeII/MgII ratios in rapidly accreting z~6 QSOs
Gisella De Rosa, Roberto Decarli, Fabian Walter, Xiaohui Fan, Linhua, Jiang, Jaron Kurk, Anna Pasquali, Hans-Walter Rix

TL;DR
This study analyzes high-redshift quasars to investigate black hole growth and chemical abundances, finding that FeII/MgII ratios remain constant over a broad cosmic time span, indicating early chemical enrichment.
Contribution
It provides the most extensive homogeneous analysis of z>4 quasars, revealing consistent FeII/MgII ratios and detailed accretion properties across a wide redshift range.
Findings
Black holes in z>4 quasars are ~10^9 M extsubscript{⊙} and accrete near the Eddington limit.
FeII/MgII ratios show no evolution from z=4 to z=6.5.
High-redshift quasars have lower black hole masses at a given luminosity compared to lower-redshift counterparts.
Abstract
[abridged] Quasars (QSOs) at the highest known redshift (z~6) are unique probes of the early growth of supermassive black holes (BHs). Until now, only the most luminous QSOs have been studied, often one object at a time. Here we present the most extensive consistent analysis to date of z>4 QSOs with observed NIR spectra, combining three new z~6 objects from our ongoing VLT-ISAAC program with nineteen 4<z<6.5 sources from the literature. The new sources extend the existing SDSS sample towards the faint end of the QSO luminosity function. Using a maximum likelihood fitting routine optimized for our spectral decomposition, we estimate the black hole mass (MBH), the Eddington ratio (defined as Lbol/LEdd) and the FeII/MgII line ratio, a proxy for the chemical abundance, to characterize both the central object and the broad line region gas. The QSOs in our sample host BHs with masses of ~10^9…
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