Probing Early Super-massive Black Hole Growth and Quasar Evolution with Near-infrared Spectroscopy of 37 Reionization-era Quasars at 6.3 < z <= 7.64
Jinyi Yang, Feige Wang, Xiaohui Fan, Aaron J. Barth, Joseph F., Hennawi, Riccardo Nanni, Fuyan Bian, Frederick B. Davies, Emanuele P. Farina,, Jan-Torge Schindler, Eduardo Banados, Roberto Decarli, Anna-Christina Eilers,, Richard Green, Hengxiao Guo, Linhua Jiang, Jiang-Tao Li

TL;DR
This study presents near-infrared spectra of 37 high-redshift quasars, revealing insights into early supermassive black hole growth, quasar properties, and metal enrichment during the reionization era.
Contribution
It provides the largest near-infrared spectral sample of quasars at z>6.3, analyzing black hole masses, accretion rates, emission line properties, and metal enrichment, with new insights into quasar evolution at the reionization epoch.
Findings
Black hole masses range from 0.3 to 3.6 billion solar masses.
Eddington ratios peak at ~0.8, indicating high accretion rates.
No strong redshift evolution in FeII/MgII ratios or broad emission line properties.
Abstract
We report the results of near-infrared spectroscopic observations of 37 quasars in the redshift range , including 32 quasars at , forming the largest quasar near-infrared spectral sample at this redshift. The spectra, taken with Keck, Gemini, VLT, and Magellan, allow investigations of central black hole mass and quasar rest-frame ultraviolet spectral properties. The black hole masses derived from the MgII emission lines are in the range , which requires massive seed black holes with masses , assuming Eddington accretion since . The Eddington ratio distribution peaks at and has a mean of 1.08, suggesting high accretion rates for these quasars. The CIV - MgII emission line velocity differences in our sample show an increase of CIV blueshift towards higher redshift, but the…
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