The Physical Origin of Extreme Emission Line Galaxies at High redshifts: Strong {\sc [Oiii]} Emission Lines Produced by Obscured AGNs
Chenghao Zhu, Yuichi Harikane, Masami Ouchi, Yoshiaki Ono, Masato, Onodera, Shenli Tang, Yuki Isobe, Yoshiki Matsuoka, Toshihiro Kawaguchi,, Hiroya Umeda, Kimihiko Nakajima, Yongming Liang, Yi Xu, Yechi Zhang,, Dongsheng Sun, Kazuhiro Shimasaku, Jenny Greene, Kazushi Iwasawa

TL;DR
This study investigates the physical origins of extreme [OIII] emission lines in high-redshift galaxies, finding that obscured AGNs likely produce the strong emission without clear optical AGN signatures.
Contribution
It demonstrates that obscured AGNs can explain the large [OIII] equivalent widths in high-redshift galaxies, challenging previous assumptions based solely on stellar or unobscured AGN models.
Findings
Obscured AGNs show strong near-infrared excess in SEDs.
Large [OIII] EWs are not explained by stellar or unobscured AGN spectra.
Obscured AGNs produce ionizing photons that generate strong [OIII] emission.
Abstract
We present deep Subaru/FOCAS spectra for two extreme emission line galaxies (EELGs) at with strong {\sc[Oiii]}5007 emission lines, exhibiting equivalent widths (EWs) of \AA\ and \AA, comparable to those of EELGs at high redshifts that are now routinely identified with JWST spectroscopy. Adding a similarly large {\sc [Oiii]} EW ( \AA) EELG found at in the JWST CEERS survey to our sample, we explore for the physical origins of the large {\sc [Oiii]} EWs of these three galaxies with the Subaru spectra and various public data including JWST/NIRSpec, NIRCam, and MIRI data. While there are no clear signatures of AGN identified by the optical line diagnostics, we find that two out of two galaxies covered by the MIRI data show strong near-infrared excess in the spectral energy distributions (SEDs)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Scientific Research and Discoveries
