Discovery of Quasar Variability and Early Accretion Disk Signatures at Cosmic Dawn
Gene C. K. Leung, Anna-Christina Eilers, Christos Panagiotou, Julien Wolf, Kishalay De, Luke Weisenbach, Minghao Yue, Xiaohui Fan, Yuzo Ishikawa, Erin Kara, Mirko Krumpe, Andrea Merloni, Robert A. Simcoe, Feige Wang, Jinyi Yang

TL;DR
This paper reports the first detection of multi-wavelength variability in a quasar just 850 million years after the Big Bang, providing insights into early accretion disk structures and physics.
Contribution
It presents observational evidence of variability in a high-redshift quasar, constraining accretion disk properties during the early universe.
Findings
Infrared variability observed across five filters tracing the accretion disk.
X-ray variability indicating active corona in early quasar.
Accretion disk identified as geometrically thin and optically thick.
Abstract
In the nearby universe, quasars are well known to exhibit variability in their brightness over time, offering a powerful tool to probe the physics of accretion onto the SMBH and directly measure the mass of the SMBH. However, detecting variability in early quasars remains challenging. Here, we report the detection of multi-wavelength infrared and X-ray variability in a quasar observed just 850 million years after the Big Bang. The infrared variability spans five filters, tracing rest-frame ultraviolet and optical emission from the accretion disk, while the X-ray variability probes the corona. The variable spectrum reveals that the accretion disk has a geometrically thin, optically thick structure. This provides observational constraints on the accretion disk structure at early times, when quasars are accreting at high Eddington ratios and reside in extreme environments. Our findings…
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