| Literature DB >> 35546195 |
M Bischetti1, C Feruglio2,3, V D'Odorico2,3,4, N Arav5, E Bañados6, G Becker7, S E I Bosman6, S Carniani4, S Cristiani2, G Cupani2, R Davies8,9, A C Eilers10, E P Farina11, A Ferrara4, R Maiolino12, C Mazzucchelli13, A Mesinger4, R A Meyer6, M Onoue6, E Piconcelli14, E Ryan-Weber8,9, J-T Schindler6, F Wang15, J Yang16, Y Zhu7, F Fiore2,3.
Abstract
Bright quasars, powered by accretion onto billion-solar-mass black holes, already existed at the epoch of reionization, when the Universe was 0.5-1 billion years old1. How these black holes formed in such a short time is the subject of debate, particularly as they lie above the correlation between black-hole mass and galaxy dynamical mass2,3 in the local Universe. What slowed down black-hole growth, leading towards the symbiotic growth observed in the local Universe, and when this process started, has hitherto not been known, although black-hole feedback is a likely driver4. Here we report optical and near-infrared observations of a sample of quasars at redshifts 5.8 ≲ z ≲ 6.6. About half of the quasar spectra reveal broad, blueshifted absorption line troughs, tracing black-hole-driven winds with extreme outflow velocities, up to 17% of the speed of light. The fraction of quasars with such outflow winds at z ≳ 5.8 is ≈2.4 times higher than at z ≈ 2-4. We infer that outflows at z ≳ 5.8 inject large amounts of energy into the interstellar medium and suppress nuclear gas accretion, slowing down black-hole growth. The outflow phase may then mark the beginning of substantial black-hole feedback. The red optical colours of outflow quasars at z ≳ 5.8 indeed suggest that these systems are dusty and may be caught during an initial quenching phase of obscured accretion5.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35546195 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04608-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962