The identification of z-dropouts in Pan-STARRS1: three quasars at 6.5<z<6.7
B. P. Venemans, E. Ba\~nados, R. Decarli, E. P. Farina, F. Walter, K., C. Chambers, X. Fan, H-W. Rix, E. Schlafly, R. G. McMahon, R. Simcoe, D., Stern, W. S. Burgett, P. W. Draper, H. Flewelling, K. W. Hodapp, N. Kaiser,, E. A. Magnier, N. Metcalfe, J. S. Morgan, P. A. Price

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of three new quasars at redshifts 6.5 to 6.7 using Pan-STARRS1, providing insights into early universe black hole growth and the state of the intergalactic medium.
Contribution
It presents the identification of three high-redshift quasars, increasing known z>6.5 quasars from 4 to 7, and analyzes their properties and surrounding ionized regions.
Findings
Discovered three new z>6.5 quasars with redshifts 6.50, 6.52, 6.66.
Estimated black hole masses between 5x10^8 and 4x10^9 solar masses.
Confirmed decreasing near zone sizes with increasing redshift.
Abstract
Luminous distant quasars are unique probes of the high redshift intergalactic medium (IGM) and of the growth of massive galaxies and black holes in the early universe. Absorption due to neutral Hydrogen in the IGM makes quasars beyond a redshift of z~6.5 very faint in the optical -band, thus locating quasars at higher redshifts require large surveys that are sensitive above 1 micron. We report the discovery of three new z>6.5 quasars, corresponding to an age of the universe of <850 Myr, selected as z-band dropouts in the Pan-STARRS1 survey. This increases the number of known z>6.5 quasars from 4 to 7. The quasars have redshifts of z=6.50, 6.52, and 6.66, and include the brightest z-dropout quasar reported to date, PSO J036.5078+03.0498 with M_1450=-27.4. We obtained near-infrared spectroscopy for the quasars and from the MgII line we estimate that the central black holes have masses…
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