James Webb Space Telescope Feed Post
A search for high-redshift direct collapse black hole candidates in the PEARLS north ecliptic pole field
Paper abstract: Direct-collapse black holes (DCBHs) of mass ~ 10^4-10^5 M_\odot that form in HI-cooling halos in the early Universe are promising progenitors of the \gtrsim 10^9 M_\odot supermassive black holes that fuel the observed z \gtrsim 7 quasars. Efficient accretion of the surrounding gas onto such DCBH seeds may render them sufficiently bright for detection with the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) up to z~ 15. Additionally, the very steep and red spectral slope predicted across the ~ 1-5 \mum wavelength range of the JWST/NIRSpec instrument during their initial growth phase should make them photometrically identifiable up to very high redshifts. Here, we present a search for such DCBH candidates across the 34 arcmin^{2} in the first two spokes of the JWST cycle-1 "Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization and Lensing Science" (PEARLS) survey of the North Ecliptic Pole Time Domain Field (NEP), covering 8 NIRCam filters down to a maximum depth of ~ 29 AB mag. We identify three objects with spectral energy distributions consistent with the Pacucci et al. (2016) DCBH models. However, we also note that even with data in 8 NIRCam filters, objects of this type remain degenerate with dusty galaxies and obscured active galactic nuclei over a wide range of redshifts. Follow-up spectroscopy would be required to pin down the nature of these objects, and two of our DCBH candidates are sufficiently bright to make this practical. Based on our sample of DCBH candidates and assumptions on the typical duration of the DCBH steep-slope state, we set a conservative upper limit of ~ 7\times 10^{-4} comoving Mpc^{-3} (cMpc^{-3}) on the comoving density of host halos capable of hosting DCBHs with spectral energy distributions similar to the Pacucci et al. (2016) models at z~ 6-13.