Little Red and Blue Dots: simply stratified Broad Line Regions
J. Scholtz, F. D'Eugenio, R. Maiolino, M. Brazzini, H. \"Ubler, X. Ji, M. Perna, F. Sun, G. Brocchi, S. Carniani, G. Cresci, L. R. Ivey, I. Juod\v{z}balis, A. Marconi, G. Mazzolari, G. Risaliti, B. Trefoloni

TL;DR
This study analyzes Hα broad line profiles in AGN, revealing that exponential profiles are not universally preferred and can naturally arise from BLR stratification, challenging the electron scattering interpretation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that exponential broad line profiles can result from BLR stratification without electron scattering, providing an alternative explanation for observed line shapes.
Findings
Exponential profiles are not statistically preferred in ~60% of cases.
Lorentzian and multi-Gaussian profiles often fit the data better.
Stacked lines tend to produce exponential profiles even if individual lines do not.
Abstract
It has been claimed that a fraction of the so-called Little Red Dots (LRDs) are characterised by exponential broad line profiles, which have been ascribed to broadening from electron scattering by an ionised cocoon. In this work, we investigate the H broad line profiles of 32 AGN, including Little Red Dots (LRDs), Little Blue Dots (LBDs), and X-ray detected sources, using high SNR and resolution spectroscopy. We find that while single Gaussian models are statistically rejected, the exponential model is not universally preferred. Lorentzian and multi-Gaussian profiles provide equally good or superior fits for the majority of the sample, with no statistical preference for exponential profiles in 60% of cases across all AGN subtypes. There are indications that exponential profiles are preferred more frequently among LBDs, indicating that exponential profiles are not a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
