Widespread, strong outflows in XQR-30 quasars at the Reionisation epoch
M. Bischetti, C. Feruglio, V. D'Odorico, N. Arav, E. Ba\~nados, G., Becker, S.E.I. Bosman, S. Carniani, S. Cristiani, G. Cupani, R. Davies, A.C., Eilers, E.P. Farina, A. Ferrara, R. Maiolino, C. Mazzucchelli, A. Mesinger,, R. Meyer, M. Onoue, E. Piconcelli, E. Ryan-Weber

TL;DR
This study reveals that high-redshift quasars exhibit widespread, powerful outflows that likely play a crucial role in regulating black hole growth and galaxy evolution during the epoch of Reionisation.
Contribution
It provides the first large, homogeneous spectroscopic survey of z~6 quasars, showing high BAL fractions and extreme outflow velocities, indicating strong feedback processes at this epoch.
Findings
50% of quasars show broad blue-shifted absorption lines.
BAL quasars at z~6 have outflows up to 17% of light speed.
High BAL fraction suggests significant feedback during early galaxy formation.
Abstract
Luminous quasars powered by accretion onto billion solar mass black holes already exist at the epoch of Reionisation, when the Universe was 0.5-1 Gyr old. These objects likely reside in over-dense regions of the Universe, and will grow to form today's giant galaxies. How their huge black holes formed in such short times is debated, particularly as they lie above the local black hole mass-galaxy dynamical mass correlation, thus following the black hole-dominance growth path. It is unknown what slowed down the black hole growth, leading towards the symbiotic growth observed in the local Universe, and when this process started, although black hole feedback is a likely driver. This deadlock is due to the lack of large, homogeneous samples of high-redshift quasars with high-quality, broad-band spectroscopic information. Here we report results from a VLT/X-shooter survey of 30 quasars at…
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