EIGER VI. The Correlation Function, Host Halo Mass and Duty Cycle of Luminous Quasars at $z\gtrsim6$
Anna-Christina Eilers, Ruari Mackenzie, Elia Pizzati, Jorryt Matthee,, Joseph F. Hennawi, Haowen Zhang, Rongmon Bordoloi, Daichi Kashino, Simon J., Lilly, Rohan P. Naidu, Robert A. Simcoe, Minghao Yue, Carlos S. Frenk, John, C. Helly, Matthieu Schaller, Joop Schaye

TL;DR
This study uses JWST observations to analyze the environments of luminous high-redshift quasars, revealing diverse density regions, quasar-host halo masses, and short duty cycles, challenging existing models of early black hole growth.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of quasar and galaxy clustering at z>6, estimates host halo masses, and discusses implications for black hole growth and duty cycles in the early universe.
Findings
Discovery of a proto-cluster with density enhancement δ≈65.
Quasar host halo mass estimated at ~10^12.4 solar masses.
Quasar duty cycle inferred to be much less than 1.
Abstract
We expect luminous () high-redshift quasars to trace the highest density peaks in the early universe. Here, we present observations of four quasar fields using JWST/NIRCam in imaging and widefield slitless spectroscopy mode and report a wide range in the number of detected [OIII]-emitting galaxies in the quasars' environments, ranging between a density enhancement of within a cMpc radius - one of the largest proto-clusters during the Epoch of Reionization discovered to date - to a density contrast consistent with zero, indicating the presence of a UV-luminous quasar in a region comparable to the average density of the universe. By measuring the two-point cross-correlation function of quasars and their surrounding galaxies, as well as the galaxy auto-correlation function, we infer a correlation length of quasars at $\langle…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
