The Brightest Ly$\alpha$ Emitter: Pop III or Black Hole?
A. Pallottini, A. Ferrara, F. Pacucci, S. Gallerani, S. Salvadori, R., Schneider, D. Schaerer, D. Sobral, J. Matthee

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether the luminous high-redshift galaxy CR7 is powered by Population III stars or a direct collapse black hole, using simulations and modeling to interpret its extreme emission lines.
Contribution
It provides a detailed simulation-based analysis of CR7, proposing criteria to distinguish between Pop III stars and black hole scenarios, and predicts observable signatures for future tests.
Findings
CR7's properties can be explained by a massive, young Pop III starburst or a DCBH.
Simulations show the 'Pop III wave' pattern similar to CR7.
Future X-ray observations can differentiate the powering source.
Abstract
CR7 is the brightest emitter (LAE) known to date, and spectroscopic follow-up by Sobral et al. (2015) suggests that CR7 might host Population (Pop) III stars. We examine this interpretation using cosmological hydrodynamical simulations. Several simulated galaxies show the same "Pop III wave" pattern observed in CR7. However, to reproduce the extreme CR7 /HeII1640 line luminosities () a top-heavy IMF and a massive () PopIII burst with age Myr are required. Assuming that the observed properties of and HeII emission are typical for Pop III, we predict that in the COSMOS/UDS/SA22 fields, 14 out of the 30 LAEs at with should also host Pop III stars producing an observable . As an…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
