Pulsational mass loss from supermassive stars creates the compact shells of Little Red Dots
Devesh Nandal, Igor Chilingarian, Chris Nagele, John Chisholm, Franz E. Bauer, Abraham Loeb

TL;DR
This study proposes that pulsational mass loss from supermassive stars creates dense, compact shells that explain the observed properties of Little Red Dots in the JWST era, linking stellar evolution to galaxy formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that late pulsational mass loss from supermassive stars can produce dense gas cocoons, providing a physical explanation for Little Red Dots and their connection to black hole seed formation.
Findings
Late pulsational mass loss occurs via discrete ejection episodes.
The final ejection creates a dense, optically thick shell matching LRD observations.
This mass-loss mechanism persists across a range of metallicities from Pop III to 10^{-2} Z_sun.
Abstract
Little Red Dots (LRDs) have emerged as one of the central puzzles of the JWST era. Their spectra increasingly require dense gas close to the source, yet the physical origin of that cocoon-like structure remains unclear. We examine whether late pulsational mass loss from supermassive stars (SMS)leads to dense gas cocoons. We analyze five accreting GENEC models at different metallicities with characteristic masses of order , following them through post-accretion evolution with radial pulsation calculations and general relativistic (GR) stability diagnostics. Mass loss during the final stages of evolution occurs not as a steady wind, but through discrete strange-mode ejection episodes. In the model, which provides the clearest LRD analogue, four late episodes last -- yr and eject -- each, for a total loss of…
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