Direct pathway to the Early Supermassive Black Holes: A Red Super-Eddington Quasar in a Massive Starburst Host at $z=7.2$
Qinyue Fei, Seiji Fujimoto, Gabriel Brammer, Ruancun Li, Luis C. Ho, Volker Bromm, Javier \'Alvarez-M\'arquez, Yoshihisa Asada, Guillermo Barro, Luis Colina, Pratika Dayal, Steven L. Finkelstein, Johan P.U. Fynbo, Michele Ginolfi, Kohei Inayoshi, Vasily Kokorev, Gene C. K. Leung

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed analysis of GNz7q, a high-redshift, super-Eddington accreting black hole within a massive starburst galaxy, illustrating a direct pathway for early supermassive black hole formation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of a super-Eddington black hole in a massive starburst host at z=7.2, revealing a key phase in early black hole-galaxy co-evolution.
Findings
Black hole mass of log(M_BH/M_sun)=7.55±0.34
Host galaxy stellar mass of log(M_*/M_sun)=10.5±0.4
Star formation rate of 330±97 M_sun/yr
Abstract
We present a panchromatic optical-mm characterization of GNz7q, a recently identified X-ray weak, rapidly growing red quasar embedded within a dusty starburst galaxy at , using the full suite of JWST/NIRCam, NIRSpec, MIRI, and archival NOEMA observations. Our deep NIRSpec/G395M spectroscopy reveals unambiguous broad Balmer emission (FWHM kms), confirming a super-Eddington accreting black hole () with a mass of , using accretion-rate corrected BH mass estimators. After subtracting the point source, we robustly detect stellar emission from the host galaxy across multiple NIRCam and MIRI filters. Out joint morphological-spectral analysis yields a stellar mass of and an intense star formation rate of , confirming the host…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
