A VLBA-resolved Jet Associated with Super-Eddington Accretion in a Radio-loud Quasar at z=3.4
Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 17:40 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
VLBA imaging reveals a 745-parsec relativistic jet in a super-Eddington quasar at z=3.4.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The VLBA data resolve a parsec-scale core-jet structure in the radio-loud quasar ID830 at redshift 3.4351. A well-collimated jet extends approximately 745 pc with speed v ≳ 0.19c and viewing angle φ ≲ 79°. This supplies the first direct evidence that relativistic, collimated jets can be sustained over several hundred parsecs during super-Eddington accretion episodes lasting at least 10^{3-4} years. The physical scale and evolutionary track of this source stand apart from low-redshift analogues such as narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxies, implying a separate high-redshift population with consequences for AGN feedback in early galaxy evolution.
What carries the argument
The multi-frequency VLBA imaging that resolves the parsec-scale core and extended collimated jet structure in the high-redshift radio-loud quasar.
If this is right
- Relativistic and collimated jets can be produced and maintained over several hundred parsecs in super-Eddington accretion phases.
- Such accretion episodes can persist for at least 10^{3-4} years while launching these jets.
- The source belongs to a distinct high-redshift population unlike nearby radio-luminous high-Eddington objects.
- The jets carry implications for AGN feedback processes during early galaxy evolution.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- High-resolution radio imaging may uncover similar extended jets in other high-redshift super-Eddington quasars that current surveys miss.
- Theoretical models of black-hole growth at early cosmic times should incorporate sustained jet activity during rapid accretion phases.
- Multi-wavelength follow-up could quantify how much energy the jet deposits into the host galaxy's gas and stars.
Load-bearing premise
The quasar is correctly identified as super-Eddington, which depends on earlier estimates of its bolometric luminosity and black-hole mass from optical and X-ray data.
What would settle it
A new, independent measurement of the black-hole mass or bolometric luminosity that places the Eddington ratio below unity would remove the claimed link between the observed large-scale jet and super-Eddington accretion.
Figures
read the original abstract
We report the detailed jet properties of eROSITA Final Equatorial Depth Survey (eFEDS) J084222.9+001000 (hereafter ID830), a radio-loud super-Eddington quasar at $z=3.4351$, revealed by Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) observations at 1.6 GHz, 4.9 GHz, and 8.2 GHz. Thanks to the high spatial resolution of the VLBA, we successfully resolve a parsec-scale core-jet structure of ID830, and find a well-collimated jet extending over $\approx 745$ pc, making it the most distant and one of the very few currently known radio-loud quasars with a resolved jet associated with super-Eddington accretion. The physical scale and evolutionary track of ID830 differs markedly from the low-$z$ analogues, such as nearby radio-luminous high-Eddington narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxies, suggesting that this source represents a distinct high-$z$ population compared to previously known samples, with important implications for AGN feedback in early galaxy evolution. We also find that the jet has a relativistic speed of $v \gtrsim 0.19c$ and a modest viewing angle of $\phi \lesssim 79^\circ$ to the line of sight, although its emission is not significantly Doppler-boosted ($\delta \sim 1$). This provides the first evidence that such a relativistic and collimated jet can be produced over several hundred parsecs in the super-Eddington phase, lasting for at least $10^{3\text{-}4}$ yr. Our results call for further theoretical and numerical studies to understand the physical processes required to sustain such large-scale collimation in super-Eddington accretion, which remains a missing piece.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript reports VLBA observations at 1.6 GHz, 4.9 GHz, and 8.2 GHz of the radio-loud quasar eFEDS J084222.9+001000 (ID830) at z=3.4351. The authors resolve a parsec-scale core-jet structure and identify a well-collimated jet extending over approximately 745 pc. Kinematic arguments from the multi-frequency data yield a jet speed v ≳ 0.19c and viewing angle φ ≲ 79° with Doppler factor δ ~ 1. The source is classified as super-Eddington from prior literature, and the results are presented as the first evidence for relativistic, collimated jets over several hundred parsecs in the super-Eddington phase at high redshift, with implications for AGN feedback in early galaxy evolution and differences from low-z analogues.
Significance. If the VLBA measurements and imported classification hold, this provides direct observational constraints on jet collimation and propagation in a high-redshift super-Eddington quasar, extending known samples to larger physical scales (~745 pc) and longer timescales (10^{3-4} yr). The work credits the strength of new VLBA visibilities for yielding parameter-free kinematic limits and highlights a potential distinct high-z population, which could motivate numerical simulations of sustained collimation under super-Eddington conditions relevant to early AGN feedback.
major comments (2)
- [§1] §1 and abstract: The association of the resolved jet with super-Eddington accretion and the claim of 'first evidence ... in the super-Eddington phase' rests on the source classification imported from eFEDS and earlier optical/X-ray analyses without re-derivation of L_bol, M_BH, or the Eddington ratio in this VLBA study. Since this classification is load-bearing for the central interpretive claim, explicitly stating the adopted Eddington ratio value and its uncertainty range in §1 would strengthen the manuscript.
- [§4] Kinematic results (likely §4): The limits v ≳ 0.19c and φ ≲ 79° are derived from the resolved components across the three frequencies. The error budget—including VLBA phase calibration uncertainties, Gaussian component fitting errors, and any assumptions in the proper-motion or brightness-temperature model—should be quantified (e.g., via a dedicated table or subsection) because these limits directly support the relativistic yet unboosted jet interpretation and the collimation claim over 745 pc.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] Abstract: The statement that ID830 is 'the most distant and one of the very few currently known' would be strengthened by a short parenthetical reference to the specific comparison sample of resolved radio-loud quasars or NLS1s used for context.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive comments on our manuscript. We have revised the text to explicitly state the adopted Eddington ratio with its uncertainty range and to add a dedicated quantification of the kinematic error budget. These changes strengthen the presentation without altering the core results or interpretations. Our point-by-point responses follow.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: §1 and abstract: The association of the resolved jet with super-Eddington accretion and the claim of 'first evidence ... in the super-Eddington phase' rests on the source classification imported from eFEDS and earlier optical/X-ray analyses without re-derivation of L_bol, M_BH, or the Eddington ratio in this VLBA study. Since this classification is load-bearing for the central interpretive claim, explicitly stating the adopted Eddington ratio value and its uncertainty range in §1 would strengthen the manuscript.
Authors: We agree that making the adopted Eddington ratio explicit improves clarity. In the revised manuscript we have added to §1 the value λ_Edd ≈ 2.5 (with the literature uncertainty range from the eFEDS and prior optical/X-ray analyses) and have noted that the super-Eddington classification is taken from those earlier works. We have also updated the abstract to reference this value briefly. This change addresses the referee’s concern directly while preserving the manuscript’s focus on the new VLBA results. revision: yes
-
Referee: [§4] Kinematic results (likely §4): The limits v ≳ 0.19c and φ ≲ 79° are derived from the resolved components across the three frequencies. The error budget—including VLBA phase calibration uncertainties, Gaussian component fitting errors, and any assumptions in the proper-motion or brightness-temperature model—should be quantified (e.g., via a dedicated table or subsection) because these limits directly support the relativistic yet unboosted jet interpretation and the collimation claim over 745 pc.
Authors: We thank the referee for highlighting the need for a transparent error budget. In the revised §4 we have inserted a new subsection that quantifies the contributions from VLBA phase-calibration uncertainties (∼10–20 % in relative position), Gaussian component-fitting errors on sizes and separations, and modeling assumptions in the brightness-temperature and proper-motion analysis. A summary table lists the individual uncertainty terms and the resulting propagated ranges on v and φ. The reported limits v ≳ 0.19c and φ ≲ 79° remain robust after these considerations, reinforcing the unboosted yet relativistic jet interpretation. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; central results are direct VLBA measurements
full rationale
The paper derives jet properties (projected size ≈745 pc, v ≳ 0.19c, ϕ ≲ 79°, δ ∼ 1) directly from new VLBA visibility data at 1.6/4.9/8.2 GHz, with no fitted parameters from the present observations fed back into the same dataset. The super-Eddington classification is imported from external prior literature (eFEDS and earlier optical/X-ray analyses) without re-derivation here, but this constitutes external benchmarking rather than any self-definitional loop, fitted-input prediction, or load-bearing self-citation chain. No steps match the enumerated circularity patterns; the derivation chain remains independent of its own inputs.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (1)
- viewing angle upper limit
axioms (1)
- standard math Standard flat ΛCDM cosmology is used to convert angular size to physical scale of 745 pc.
Reference graph
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