The need for obscured supermassive black hole growth to explain quasar proximity zones in the epoch of reionization
Sindhu Satyavolu (TIFR), Girish Kulkarni (TIFR), Laura C. Keating, (Edinburgh), Martin G. Haehnelt (Cambridge)

TL;DR
This paper proposes that short duty cycles and obscured growth phases of supermassive black holes explain the observed sizes of quasar proximity zones during reionization, challenging previous assumptions about quasar lifetimes.
Contribution
It introduces a unified model accounting for small and large proximity zones through variable quasar brightness and obscured growth, supported by large-scale simulations.
Findings
Short quasar duty cycles (~10^4 yr) can explain small proximity zones.
Obscured black hole growth phases (>70%) reconcile black hole mass estimates.
Incomplete reionization can reduce proximity zone sizes by up to 30%.
Abstract
Proximity zones of high-redshift quasars are unique probes of supermassive black hole formation, but simultaneously explaining proximity zone sizes and black hole masses has proved to be challenging. We study the robustness of some of the assumptions that are usually made to infer quasar lifetimes from proximity zone sizes. We show that small proximity zones can be readily explained by quasars that vary in brightness with a short duty cycle of and short bright periods of yr, even for long lifetimes. We further show that reconciling this with black hole mass estimates requires the black hole to continue to grow and accrete during its obscured phase. The consequent obscured fractions of 0.7 or higher are consistent with low-redshift measurements and models of black hole accretion. Such short duty cycles and long obscured phases…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRelativity and Gravitational Theory · History and Theory of Mathematics · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
