A high black hole to host mass ratio in a lensed AGN in the early Universe
Lukas J. Furtak, Ivo Labb\'e, Adi Zitrin, Jenny E. Greene, Pratika, Dayal, Iryna Chemerynska, Vasily Kokorev, Tim B. Miller, Andy D. Goulding,, Anna de Graaff, Rachel Bezanson, Gabriel B. Brammer, Sam E. Cutler, Joel, Leja, Richard Pan, Sedona H. Price, Bingjie Wang

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of a high black hole to host galaxy mass ratio in a lensed AGN at redshift 7, indicating rapid black hole growth in the early universe, observed through deep JWST spectroscopy.
Contribution
First spectroscopic confirmation of a highly reddened, high-redshift AGN with an exceptionally high black hole to galaxy mass ratio, suggesting rapid black hole growth phases in the early universe.
Findings
Black hole mass of approximately 4×10^7 solar masses
Black hole to galaxy mass ratio of at least 3%, possibly up to 100%
Black hole accreting at 30% of Eddington limit
Abstract
Early JWST observations have uncovered a new population of red sources that might represent a previously overlooked phase of supermassive black hole growth (Kocevski et al. 2023; Matthee et al. 2023, Labb\'e et al. 2023). One of the most intriguing examples is an extremely red, point-like object that was found to be triply-imaged by the strong lensing (SL) cluster Abell 2744 (Furtak et al. 2023). Here we present deep JWST/NIRSpec observations of this object, Abell2744-QSO1. The spectroscopy confirms that the three images are of the same object, and that it is a highly reddened () broad emission-line Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) at a redshift of . From the width of H () we derive a black hole mass of . We infer a very…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
