Pseudo Little Red Dot: an Active Black Hole Embedded in a Dense and Dusty, Metal-Poor Starburst Galaxy at z=5.96
Karina I. Caputi, Ryan A. Cooper, Pierluigi Rinaldi, Rafael Navarro-Carrera, Edoardo Iani

TL;DR
This study presents a highly magnified, dusty, low-metallicity galaxy at z=5.96 hosting an active black hole, revealing early black hole growth in a dense starburst environment with unique spectral features.
Contribution
It reports the discovery and detailed spectral analysis of a pseudo-LRD galaxy with an embedded active black hole at high redshift, highlighting its unique properties and early evolutionary stage.
Findings
Detection of a narrow and broad Halpha component indicating an active black hole.
Absence of metal lines suggests extremely low metallicity and high gas density.
Evidence of massive black-hole growth in a dense, dusty starburst galaxy.
Abstract
We present a study of Pseudo-LRD-NOM (Pseudo little red dot with no metal lines), a highly magnified low-mass galaxy behind the lensing cluster Abell 370 at z=5.96. We classify this object as a pseudo-LRD because its red rest-frame optical colour is mainly driven by a prominent Halpha line (with EW0 >~ 800 Angstroms) present in its JWST NIRSpec spectrum. Halpha is dominated by a narrow component and also has a minor broad component indicative of an active black hole with M_BH = 2.9x10^6 Msun. A narrow Hbeta emission line is also detected (with S/N = 8), producing a Balmer decrement (narrow) Halpha/Hbeta = 11. The rest-frame UV spectral slope is beta_UVspec = -1.2. All these features can be ascribed to high dust attenuation. However, no [OIII]5007 or any other metal lines are detected in the spectrum, so [OIII]5007/Hbeta < 0.25, at odds with a simple dust-attenuation explanation.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
