An upper limit of 10$^6$ M$_\odot$ in dust from ALMA observations in 60 Little Red Dots
Caitlin M. Casey, Hollis B. Akins, Steven L. Finkelstein, Maximilien Franco, Seiji Fujimoto, Daizhong Liu, Arianna S. Long, Georgios Magdis, Sinclaire M. Manning, Jed McKinney, Marko Shuntov, Takumi S. Tanaka

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to establish a stringent upper limit on dust mass in Little Red Dots, suggesting they contain less dust than previously thought, which impacts understanding of their nature.
Contribution
First deep ALMA 1.3mm observations of 60 LRDs set a new, tenfold deeper upper limit on dust mass, challenging prior assumptions about their dust content and nature.
Findings
No detection of dust in any LRDs at the sensitivity level.
Upper limit of 10^6 solar masses in dust mass for LRDs.
Results support models with modest dust reservoirs or dense gas causing reddening.
Abstract
By virtue of their red color, the dust in little red dots (LRDs) has been thought to be of appreciable influence, whether that dust is distributed in a torus around a compact active galactic nucleus (AGN) or diffuse in the interstellar medium (ISM) of nascent galaxies. In Casey et al. (2024) we predicted that, based on the compact sizes of LRDs (unresolved in JWST NIRCam imaging), detection of an appreciable dust mass would be unlikely. Here we present follow-up ALMA 1.3mm continuum observations of a sample of 60 LRDs drawn from Akins et al. (2024). None of the 60 LRDs are detected in imaging that reaches an average depth of . A stack of the 60 LRDs also results in a non-detection, with an inverse-variance weighted flux density measurement of . This observed limit translates to a 3 upper limit of 10 M in LRDs'…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysics and Gravity Measurements
