Little red dots as embryos of active galactic nuclei
Jian-Min Wang, Yi-Lin Wang, Yong-Jie Chen, Jun-Rong Liu, Yu-Yang Songsheng, Cheng Cheng, Yan-Rong Li, Pu Du, Hao Zhang, Yu Zhao

TL;DR
This paper proposes that the 'little red dots' are embryonic active galactic nuclei containing small central black holes with embedded stellar-mass black holes, explaining their spectral features and evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model where LRDs are early-stage AGNs with embedded stellar-mass black holes, avoiding overmassive black hole issues and explaining their spectral energy distributions.
Findings
LRDs contain central black holes less than 10^6 solar masses.
Embedded stellar-mass black holes power optical emission.
Model explains LRD spectral energy distributions and outflow features.
Abstract
As an unprecedented large population in the early universe, the JWST-discovered little red dots (LRDs) have garnered much attention for formation of massive black holes and galaxies, but their nature remains a mystery. The LRDs appearing as ``Chimeras" like both active galactic nuclei (AGNs) and galaxies have stimulated renewed interest in the roadmap of central massive black hole (cMBH) formation in AGNs. In this paper, we suggest that the LRDs contain cMBHs as demonstrated by the So{\l}tan argument and there is a large population of stellar-mass black holes (sMBHs with total mass of ) embedded inside cMBH accretion disks (cMBH-disk) as motivated by anomalous reverberations of broad H line in local AGNs. This embryo structure of LRDs () is formed as a consequence of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
