Quasar clustering at redshift 6
J. Greiner, J. Bolmer, R.M. Yates, M. Habouzit, E. Banados, P.M.J., Afonso, P. Schady

TL;DR
This study investigates the clustering of quasars at redshift 6 by searching for close pairs among a large sample, providing insights into black hole formation, growth, and the early universe's structure.
Contribution
It presents the first large-scale search for high-redshift quasar pairs, constraining models of black hole formation and clustering at early cosmic times.
Findings
No quasar pairs brighter than M1450(AB) < -26 mag within 0.1-3.3 h^-1 cMpc.
Low fraction of such pairs is consistent with galaxy evolution models.
Higher than expected incidence of brown dwarfs in the same color space.
Abstract
Large-scale surveys over the last years have revealed about 300 QSOs at redshift above 6. Follow-up observations identified surprising properties, such as the very high black hole (BH) masses, spatial correlations with surrounding cold gas of the host galaxy, or high CIV-MgII velocity shifts. In particular, the discovery of luminous high-redshift quasars suggests that at least some black holes likely have large masses at birth and grow efficiently. We aim at quantifying quasar pairs at high redshift for a large sample of objects. This provides a new key constraint on a combination of parameters related to the origin and assembly for the most massive black holes: BH formation efficiency and clustering, growth efficiency and relative contribution of BH mergers. We observed 116 spectroscopically confirmed QSOs around redshift 6 with the simultaneous 7-channel imager GROND in order to…
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