Connecting the Dots: UV-Bright Companions of Little Red Dots as Lyman-Werner Sources Enabling Direct Collapse Black Hole Formation
Josephine F.W. Baggen, Matthew T. Scoggins, Pieter van Dokkum, Zolt\'an Haiman, Alberto Torralba, Jorryt Matthee

TL;DR
This study uses JWST imaging to show that many Little Red Dots (LRDs) have UV-bright companions nearby, which could provide the radiation needed for direct-collapse black hole formation in the early universe.
Contribution
It presents observational evidence linking UV-bright companions to LRDs and supports their role in enabling direct-collapse black hole formation through radiative suppression of cooling.
Findings
Approximately 43% of LRDs host UV-bright companions within 0.5-5 kpc.
Lensed LRDs show companions at separations below 0.3 kpc, below typical resolution limits.
Lyman-Werner radiation fields near red components are sufficient for molecular hydrogen dissociation.
Abstract
We compile a sample of 83 Little Red Dots (LRDs) with JWST imaging and find that a substantial fraction (43%, rising to 85% for the most luminous LRDs) host one or more spatially offset, UV-bright companions at projected separations of , with median of . This fraction is even higher when smaller spatial scales are probed at high S/N ratio: we show that the two most strongly lensed LRDs known to date, A383-LRD and the newly discovered A68-LRD, both have UV-bright companions at separations of only kpc, below the resolution limit of most unlensed JWST samples. We explore whether these ubiquitous red/blue configurations may be physically linked to the formation of LRDs, in analogy with the "synchronized pair" scenario originally proposed for direct-collapse black hole formation. In…
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