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The Discovery of a Highly Accreting, Radio-loud Quasar at z = 6.82

Authors :
Frederick B. Davies
Bram Venemans
Antonio Pensabene
Xiaohui Fan
Irham Taufik Andika
Lukas Wenzl
Thomas Connor
Daniel Stern
Jan-Torge Schindler
Emanuele Paolo Farina
Eduardo Bañados
Emmanuel Momjian
Anna-Christina Eilers
Jinyi Yang
Joseph F. Hennawi
Aaron J. Barth
Chiara Mazzucchelli
Roberto Decarli
Feige Wang
Chris Carilli
Bañados E.
Mazzucchelli C.
Momjian E.
Eilers A.-C.
Wang F.
Schindler J.-T.
Connor T.
Andika I.T.
Barth A.J.
Carilli C.
Davies F.B.
Decarli R.
Fan X.
Farina E.P.
Hennawi J.F.
Pensabene A.
Stern D.
Venemans B.P.
Wenzl L.
Yang J.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Radio sources at the highest redshifts can provide unique information on the first massive galaxies and black holes, the densest primordial environments, and the epoch of reionization. The number of astronomical objects identified at z>6 has increased dramatically over the last few years, but previously only three radio-loud (R2500>10) sources had been reported at z>6, with the most distant being a quasar at z=6.18. Here we present the discovery and characterization of P172+18, a radio-loud quasar at z=6.823. This source has an MgII-based black hole mass of ~3x10^8 Msun and is one of the fastest accreting quasars, consistent with super-Eddington accretion. The ionized region around the quasar is among the largest measured at these redshifts, implying an active phase longer than the average lifetime of the z>6 quasar population. From archival data, there is evidence that its 1.4 GHz emission has decreased by a factor of two over the last two decades. The quasar's radio spectrum between 1.4 and 3.0 GHz is steep (alpha=-1.31) and has a radio-loudness parameter R2500~90. A second steep radio source (alpha=-0.83) of comparable brightness to the quasar is only 23.1" away (~120 kpc at z=6.82; projection probability<br />submitted to ApJ on Nov 29, 2020; accepted on Jan 31, 2021. See the companion paper by Momjian et al

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d50736b6b4bd3b4c6ceaca89afdc3c6d