P\={o}niu\={a}'ena: A Luminous $z=7.5$ Quasar Hosting a 1.5 Billion Solar Mass Black Hole
Jinyi Yang, Feige Wang, Xiaohui Fan, Joseph F. Hennawi, Frederick B., Davies, Minghao Yue, Eduardo Banados, Xue-Bing Wu, Bram Venemans, Aaron J., Barth, Fuyan Bian, Konstantina Boutsia, Roberto Decarli, Emanuele Paolo, Farina, Richard Green, Linhua Jiang, Jiang-Tao Li

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a luminous quasar at redshift 7.515 with a supermassive black hole of 1.5 billion solar masses, challenging early SMBH growth models and providing insights into reionization and galaxy formation.
Contribution
First detection of a $z>7.5$ quasar with a billion-solar-mass black hole, offering new constraints on early SMBH growth and reionization history.
Findings
Supermassive black hole of 1.5 billion solar masses at $z=7.515$
Weak damping wing indicating patchy reionization
Star formation rate of ~210 solar masses per year
Abstract
We report the discovery of a luminous quasar, J1007+2115 at ("P\={o}niu\={a}'ena"), from our wide-field reionization-era quasar survey. J1007+2115 is the second quasar now known at , deep into the reionization epoch. The quasar is powered by a supermassive black hole (SMBH), based on its broad MgII emission-line profile from Gemini and Keck near-IR spectroscopy. The SMBH in J1007+2115 is twice as massive as that in quasar J1342+0928 at , the current quasar redshift record holder. The existence of such a massive SMBH just 700 million years after the Big Bang significantly challenges models of the earliest SMBH growth. Model assumptions of Eddington-limited accretion and a radiative efficiency of 0.1 require a seed black hole of at . This requirement suggests either a massive black hole seed as…
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