QSO obscuration at high redshift ($z \gtrsim 7$): Predictions from the BlueTides simulation
Yueying Ni, Tiziana Di Matteo, Roberto Gilli, Rupert A.C. Croft, Yu, Feng, Colin Norman

TL;DR
This study uses the BlueTides simulation to analyze quasar obscuration at high redshift ($z geq 7$), revealing that most obscuring gas is near the galaxy center and that dust extinction heavily biases UV observations of early AGNs.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed predictions of high-redshift quasar obscuration and dust extinction effects based on a large cosmological simulation.
Findings
Most obscuring gas is within 10 kpc of the galaxy center.
Bright quasars exhibit large angular variations in obscuration.
Over 99% of $z \\sim 7$ AGNs are heavily dust extincted.
Abstract
High- AGNs hosted in gas rich galaxies are expected to grow through significantly obscured accretion phases. This may limit or bias their observability. In this work, we use \textsc{BlueTides}, a large volume cosmological simulation of galaxy formation to examine quasar obscuration for the highest-redshift () supermassive black holes residing in the center of galaxies. We find that for the bright quasars, most of the high column density gas () resides in the innermost regions of the host galaxy, (typically within ckpc), while the gas in the outskirts is a minor contributor to the . The brightest quasars can have large angular variations in galactic obscuration, over 2 orders of magnitude, where the lines of sight with the lowest obscuration are those formed via strong gas outflows driven by AGN feedback. We find that for the overall AGN…
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