The Small Sizes and High Implied Densities of `Little Red Dots' with Balmer Breaks Could Explain Their Broad Emission Lines Without an AGN
Josephine F.W. Baggen, Pieter van Dokkum, Gabriel Brammer, Anna de, Graaff, Marijn Franx, Jenny Greene, Ivo Labb\'e, Joel Leja, Michael V., Maseda, Erica J. Nelson, Hans-Walter Rix, Bingjie Wang, Andrea Weibel

TL;DR
This study suggests that the broad emission lines in 'little red dots' at high redshift can be explained by their extremely compact sizes and high stellar densities, without necessarily invoking active galactic nuclei (AGN).
Contribution
It proposes that the broad lines in these galaxies may result from their dense stellar populations rather than AGN activity, challenging the traditional interpretation.
Findings
Galaxies have half-light radii around 100 pc, comparable to ultra compact dwarfs.
Implied central densities exceed those of known galaxy populations by an order of magnitude.
Velocity dispersions derived from galaxy properties match observed broad Hβ line widths.
Abstract
Early JWST studies found an apparent population of massive, compact galaxies at redshifts . Recently three of these galaxies were shown to have prominent Balmer breaks, demonstrating that their light at is dominated by a stellar population that is relatively old (200 Myr). All three also have broad H emission with , a common feature of such `little red dots'. From S\'ersic profile fits to the NIRCam images in F200W we find that the stellar light of galaxies is extremely compact: the galaxies have half-light radii of 100 pc, in the regime of ultra compact dwarfs in the nearby Universe. Their masses are uncertain, as they depend on the contribution of possible light from an AGN to the flux at . If the AGN contribution is low beyond the Balmer break…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadiative Heat Transfer Studies · High voltage insulation and dielectric phenomena · Image and Signal Denoising Methods
