The cosmic timeline implied by the highest redshift quasars
Fulvio Melia

TL;DR
This paper argues that the existence of high-redshift quasars with supermassive black holes can be explained by the $R_{h}=ct$ universe model, challenging the standard cosmology's ability to account for their rapid formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the $R_{h}=ct$ cosmology naturally explains early supermassive black hole growth, providing an alternative to exotic seed formation theories in standard cosmology.
Findings
High-redshift quasars are consistent with $R_{h}=ct$ cosmology predictions.
Standard model evolution is too compressed to explain early black hole growth.
Supports $R_{h}=ct$ universe as a viable cosmological model.
Abstract
The conventional picture of supermassive black-hole growth in the standard model had already been seriously challenged by the emergence of quasars at , conflicting with the predicted formation of structure in the early CDM Universe. But the most recent {\it JWST} discovery of a source at argues even more strongly against the possibility that these black holes were created in Pop II or III supernovae, followed by Eddington-limited accretion. Attempts at resolving this anomaly have largely focused on the formation of seeds via an exotic, direct collapse of primordial gas to an initial mass -- a process that has never been seen anywhere in the cosmos. Our goal in this {\it Letter} is to demonstrate that the emergence of these black holes is instead fully consistent with standard astrophysics in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Advanced Mathematical Theories and Applications
