Life After the Quasar: Overmassive Black Holes and Remnant Ionised Bubbles in and Around Two z~6.6 Galaxies
Romain A. Meyer, Pascal A. Oesch, Callum Witten, Richard S. Elllis, Sarah E. I. Bosman, Fred Davies, Alyssa B. Drake, Nicolas Laporte, Jorryt Matthee, Fabian Walter

TL;DR
This study uses JWST observations to identify overmassive black holes in two high-redshift galaxies, revealing their impact on galaxy evolution and ionised bubbles during the Epoch of Reionisation.
Contribution
First direct evidence of overmassive SMBHs in z~6.6 galaxies with implications for quasar activity and galaxy formation models.
Findings
Black hole masses are comparable to faint z~6-7 quasars.
High BH-to-stellar-mass ratios exceed local relations by 400-800 times.
Ionised bubbles suggest recent quasar episodes within 1 Myr.
Abstract
Supermassive black holes (SMBH, ) powering luminous quasars already exist one billion years after the Big Bang, yet their connection to their star-forming host galaxies, their relation to the general galaxy population and their contribution to Reionisation remains deeply enigmatic. JWST is finding numerous Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) in high-redshift galaxies with black hole masses that appear to be over-massive compared to their host's stellar mass, but rarely as massive as those found in luminous quasars. Here we report JWST/NIRSpec observations revealing overmassive SMBH in two ultra-luminous Lyman- emitters at that exhibit rare double-peaked Lyman-alpha profiles. The broad Balmer lines indicate black hole masses , matching that found in faint quasars, and very high BH-to-stellar-mass…
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