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Distribution of the very first PopIII stars and their relation to bright z~6 quasars

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 Added by Michele Trenti
 Publication date 2007
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We discuss the link between dark matter halos hosting the first PopIII stars and the rare, massive, halos that are generally considered to host bright quasars at high redshift z~6. The main question that we intend to answer is whether the super-massive black holes powering these QSOs grew out from the seeds planted by the first intermediate massive black holes created in the universe. This question involves a dynamical range of 10^13 in mass and we address it by combining N-body simulations of structure formation to identify the most massive halos at z~6 with a Monte Carlo method based on linear theory to obtain the location and formation times of the first light halos within the whole simulation box. We show that the descendants of the first ~10^6 Msun virialized halos do not, on average, end up in the most massive halos at z~6, but rather live in a large variety of environments. The oldest PopIII progenitors of the most massive halos at z~6, form instead from density peaks that are on average one and a half standard deviations more common than the first PopIII star formed in the volume occupied by one bright high-z QSO. The intermediate mass black hole seeds planted by the very first PopIII stars at z>40 can easily grow to masses m_BH>10^9.5 Msun by z=6 assuming Eddington accretion with radiative efficiency epsilon~0.1. Quenching of the black hole accretion is therefore crucial to avoid an overabundance of supermassive black holes at lower redshift. This can be obtained if the mass accretion is limited to a fraction eta~6*10^{-3} of the total baryon mass of the halo hosting the black hole. The resulting high end slope of the black hole mass function at z=6 is alpha ~ -3.7, a value within the 1sigma error bar for the bright end slope of the observed quasar luminosity function at z=6.

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160 - M. Trenti STScI 2007
We discuss the link between dark matter halos hosting the first PopIII stars formed at redshift z > 40 and the rare, massive, halos that are generally considered to host bright z~6 quasars. We show that within the typical volume occupied by one bright high-z QSO the remnants of the first several thousands PopIII stars formed do not end up in the most massive halos at z~6, but rather live in a large variety of environments. The black hole seeds planted by these very first PopIII stars can easily grow to M > 10^{9.5} Msun by z=6 assuming Eddington accretion with radiative efficiency epsilon~0.1. Therefore quenching of the accretion is crucial to avoid an overabundance of supermassive black holes. We implement a simple feedback model for the growth of the seeds planted by PopIII stars and obtain a z~6 BH mass function consistent with the observed QSO luminosity function.
63 - B. Chehade 2018
Recently, Carnall et al. discovered two bright high redshift quasars using the combination of the VST ATLAS and WISE surveys. The technique involved using the 3-D colour plane i-z:z-W1:W1-W2 with the WISE W1 (3.4 micron) and W2 (4.5 micron) bands taking the place of the usual NIR J band to help decrease stellar dwarf contamination. Here we report on our continued search for 5.7<z<6.4 quasars over an ~2x larger area of ~3577 sq. deg. of the Southern Hemisphere. We have found two further z>6 quasars, VST-ATLAS J158.6938-14.4211 at z=6.07 and J332.8017-32.1036 at z=6.32 with magnitudes of z_AB=19.4 and 19.7 mag respectively. J158.6938-14.4211 was confirmed by Keck LRIS observations and J332.8017-32.1036 was confirmed by ESO NTT EFOSC-2 observations. Here we present VLT X-shooter Visible and NIR spectra for the four ATLAS quasars. We have further independently rediscovered two z>5.7 quasars previously found by the VIKING/KiDS and PanSTARRS surveys. This means that in ATLAS we have now discovered a total of six quasars in our target 5.7<z<6.4 redshift range. Making approximate corrections for incompleteness, we find that our quasar space density agrees with the SDSS results of Jiang et al. at M_1450A~-27mag. Preliminary virial mass estimates based on the CIV and MIII emission lines give black hole masses in the range M_BH~1-6x10e9 M_solar for the four ATLAS quasars.
155 - Ian Robson 2004
We report on submillimetre observations of three high redshift (z>6) quasars, made using the SCUBA camera on the JCMT. Only one of the sample was detected at 850um-- SDSS J1148+5251 (z=6.43). It was also detected (>3 sigma significance) at 450um, one of the few z>4 quasars for which this is the case. In combination with existing millimetric data, the submm detections allow us to place limits on the temperature of the submm-emitting dust, hence on the mass of dust to be synthesized under the time constraint imposed by the quasars redshift.
Galaxies at high redshift with a strong Ly-Alpha emission line trace massive star formation in the absence of dust, and can therefore be regarded as a prime signature of the first major starburst in galaxies. We report results of the Ly-Alpha search within the Calar Alto Deep Imaging Survey (CADIS). With imaging Fabry-Perot interferometer CADIS can detect emission lines in three waveband windows free of night-sky emission lines at 700nm, 820nm, and 920nm. The typical flux detection limit for Ly-Alpha emission redshifted into these windows, Flim > 3X10^(-20) Wm^(-2), corresponds to (unobscured) star formation rates of >10Msun/yr at z=6. Candidate Ly-Alpha-emitting galaxies are selected from the total emission line sample, which contains more than 97% of objects at z<1.2, by the absence of flux below the Lyman limit (B-band dropouts), and the non-detection of secondary emission lines in narrow band filters. We have detected 5 bright Ly-Alpha-emitting galaxy candidates at z ~ 4.8, and 11 candidates at z ~ 5.7. For two of four observed Ly-Alpha candidates, one candidate at z ~ 4.8, and the other at z ~ 5.7, the emission line detected with the Fabry-Perot has been verified spectroscopically at the VLT. When compared to Ly-Alpha surveys at z<3.5 even the upper limits set by our list of candidates show that bright Ly-Alpha galaxies are significantly rarer at z>5 than the assumption of a non-evolving population would predict. Therefore we conclude that the Ly-Alpha bright phase of primeval star formation episodes reached its peak at redshifts between 3 and 6.
We present the first discoveries from a survey of $zgtrsim6$ quasars using imaging data from the DECam Legacy Survey (DECaLS) in the optical, the UKIRT Deep Infrared Sky Survey (UKIDSS) and a preliminary version of the UKIRT Hemisphere Survey (UHS) in the near-IR, and ALLWISE in the mid-IR. DECaLS will image 9000 deg$^2$ of sky down to $z_{rm AB}sim23.0$, and UKIDSS and UHS, which will map the northern sky at $0<DEC<+60^{circ}$, reaching $J_{rm VEGA}sim19.6$ (5-$sigma$). The combination of these datasets allows us to discover quasars at redshift $zgtrsim7$ and to conduct a complete census of the faint quasar population at $zgtrsim6$. In this paper, we report on the selection method of our search, and on the initial discoveries of two new, faint $zgtrsim6$ quasars and one new $z=6.63$ quasar in our pilot spectroscopic observations. The two new $zsim6$ quasars are at $z=6.07$ and $z=6.17$ with absolute magnitudes at rest-frame wavelength 1450 AA being $M_{1450}=-25.83$ and $M_{1450}=-25.76$, respectively. These discoveries suggest that we can find quasars close to or fainter than the break magnitude of the Quasar Luminosity Function (QLF) at $zgtrsim6$. The new $z=6.63$ quasar has an absolute magnitude of $M_{1450}=-25.95$. This demonstrates the potential of using the combined DECaLS and UKIDSS/UHS datasets to find $zgtrsim7$ quasars. Extrapolating from previous QLF measurements, we predict that these combined datasets will yield $sim200$ $zsim6$ quasars to $z_{rm AB} < 21.5$, $sim1{,}000$ $zsim6$ quasars to $z_{rm AB}<23$, and $sim 30$ quasars at $z>6.5$ to $J_{rm VEGA}<19.5$.
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