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What Is the Nature of Little Red Dots and what Is Not, MIRI SMILES Edition

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Abstract We study 31 little red dots (LRD) detected by JADES/NIRCam and covered by the SMILES/MIRI survey, of which ∼70% are detected in the two bluest MIRI bands and 40% in redder MIRI filters. The median/quartiles redshifts are

                    z
                    =
                    
                       
                          6.9
                       
                       
                          5.9
                       
                       
                          7.7
                       
                    
                 
               (55% spectroscopic). The spectral slopes flatten in the rest-frame near-infrared, consistent with a 1.6 μm stellar bump but bluer than direct pure emission from active galactic nuclei (AGN) tori. The apparent dominance of stellar emission at these wavelengths for many LRDs expedites stellar mass estimation: the median/quartiles are 
                 


                 
                    log
                    
                       
                          M
                       
                       
                          ⋆
                       
                    
                    
                       /
                    
                    
                       
                          M
                       
                       
                          ⊙
                       
                    
                    =
                    
                       
                          9.4
                       
                       
                          9.1
                       
                       
                          9.7
                       
                    
                 
              . The number density of LRDs is 10−4.0±0.1 Mpc−3, accounting for 14% ± 3% of the global population of galaxies with similar redshifts and masses. The rest-frame near-/mid-infrared (2–4 μm) spectral slope reveals significant amounts of warm dust (bolometric attenuation ∼3–4 mag). Our spectral energy distribution modeling implies the presence of <0.4 kpc diameter knots, heated by either dust-enshrouded OB stars or an AGN producing a similar radiation field, obscured by A(V) > 10 mag. We find a wide variety in the nature of LRDs. However, the best-fitting models for many of them correspond to extremely intense and compact starburst galaxies with mass-weighted ages 5–10 Myr, very efficient in producing dust, with their global energy output dominated by the direct (in the flat rest-frame ultraviolet and optical spectral range) and dust-recycled emission from OB stars with some contribution from an obscured AGN (in the infrared).

Description

Journal Title

The Astrophysical Journal

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0004-637X
1538-4357

Volume Title

968

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Sponsorship
MEC ∣ Agencia Estatal de Investigación (AEI) (PID022-139567NB-I00)