Quasar Radiative Feedback May Suppress Galaxy Growth on Intergalactic Scales at z = 6.3
Abstract
We present observational evidence that intense ionizing radiation from a luminous quasar suppresses nebular emission in nearby galaxies on intergalactic scales at z=6.3. Using JWST/NIRCam grism spectroscopy from the SAPPHIRES and EIGER programs, we identify a moderate but statistically significant decline in [O\,iii]\,λ5008 luminosity relative to the UV continuum (L5008/L1500) among galaxies within 7 comoving Mpc (cMpc) of the quasar J0100+2802, the most UV-luminous quasar known at this epoch (M1450=-29.26). While L1500 remains roughly constant with transverse distance, L5008 increases significantly, suggesting suppression of very recent star formation toward the quasar. The effect persists after controlling for completeness, local density, and UV luminosity, and correlates with the projected photoionization-rate profile qso. A weaker but directionally consistent suppression in L5008/L1500 is also observed along the line of sight. The transverse suppression radius ( 7 cMpc) implies a recent radiative episode with a cumulative duration 3.1 Myr, shorter than required for thermal photoheating to dominate and thus more naturally explained by rapid H2 photodissociation and related radiative processes. Environmental effects alone appear insufficient to explain the signal. Our results provide direct, geometry-based constraints on large-scale quasar radiative feedback and recent quasar lifetimes.
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