Extreme Emission Line Galaxies in CEERS Are Powered by Star Formation, not AGN
Kelcey Davis, Madisyn Brooks, Jonathan R. Trump, Vital Fern\'andez, Taylor A. Hutchison, Rebecca L. Larson, Anthony J. Taylor, Elizabeth J. McGrath, Guillermo Barro, Anton M. Koekemoer, Pablo Arrabal Haro, Mark Dickinson, Bren E. Backhaus, Nikko J. Cleri, Steven L. Finkelstein

TL;DR
This study uses JWST spectroscopy to analyze extreme emission-line galaxies in the early universe, revealing most are powered by star formation rather than AGN activity, with some AGN presence detected.
Contribution
It provides the first spectroscopic confirmation that the majority of EELGs at high redshift are driven by star formation, not AGN, refining understanding of galaxy ionization sources.
Findings
Most EELGs are powered by star formation, not AGN.
Deep spectroscopy reveals a higher fraction of AGN than photometry suggests.
Extreme EWs are dominated by narrow H alpha emission, not broad AGN lines.
Abstract
We present a spectroscopic study of photometrically identified extreme emission-line galaxies (EELGs) with observed-frame equivalent widths (EWs) >5000 A of either H alpha or H beta + [OIII] in the CEERS legacy deep field utilizing JWST NIRSpec spectroscopy from the CAPERS, RUBIES, THRILS and CEERS surveys. This master sample allows for performance tests of photometric selections and unveils what types of sources, either AGN or young star formation, were producing excessive ionizing radiation in the early Universe. We identify AGN through broad H alpha emission-lines and report 6 new broad-line AGN at 3.5<z<7 identified by the deep (~8 hr) G395M THRILS survey. We investigate the photometrically selected EELGs in a color-color plot designed for ``Little Red Dot'' selection and demonstrate that it effectively removes AGN with non-extreme lines from the sample. EELGs with and without broad…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
