James Webb Space Telescope Feed Post
A small and vigorous black hole in the early Universe
Paper abstract: Black holes with masses in excess of several billion solar masses have been found at redshifts 6-7.5, when the universe was less than 1 Gyr old. The existence of such supermassive black holes already in place at such early epochs has been challenging for theoretical models and distinguishing between different scenarios has prompted the search for their progenitors at earlier epochs. Here we present an extensive analysis of the JWST-NIRSpec spectrum (from the JADES survey) of GN-z11, an exceptionally luminous galaxy at z=10.6, revealing the detection of the high ionization [NeIV]\lambda2423 transition and semi-forbidden nebular lines tracing gas densities higher than \rm 10^{10}~cm^{-3}, typical of the Broad Line Region of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN). These spectral features indicate that, in addition to star formation, GN-z11 also hosts an accreting black hole. We do not exclude a contribution from extreme stellar populations, however Wolf Rayet stars alone cannot account for many of the spectral properties. The spectrum also reveals a deep and blueshifted CIV\lambda1549 absorption trough, tracing an outflow with a velocity of ~ 800-1000 km/s, higher than typically observed in starburst galaxies, hence likely driven by the AGN. Assuming local virial scaling relations, we derive a black hole mass of \rm \log{(M_{BH}/M_{\odot})}=6.2\pm 0.3, accreting at about 5 times the Eddington rate. While super-Eddington accretion is probably episodic, if it has been occurring for the previous ~ 100 Myr, then the black hole could have potentially originated even from a stellar mass seed at z~12-15. We finally discuss that our finding naturally explains the high luminosity of GN-z11 and can also provide an explanation for its exceptionally high nitrogen abundance.