An Investigation Into The Selection and Colors of Little Red Dots and Active Galactic Nuclei
An Investigation Into The Selection and Colors of Little Red Dots and Active Galactic Nuclei
Sep 30, 2024·,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Kevin N. Hainline
Roberto Maiolino
Ignas Juodzbalis
Jan Scholtz
Hannah Ubler
Francesco D'Eugenio
Jakob M. Helton
Yang Sun
Fengwu Sun
Brant Robertson
Sandro Tacchella
Andrew J. Bunker
Stefano Carniani
Stephane Charlot
Emma Curtis-Lake
Eiichi Egami
Benjamin D. Johnson
Xiaojing Lin
Jianwei Lyu
Pablo G. Perez-Gonzalez
Pierluigi Rinaldi
Maddie S. Silcock
Christina C. Williams
Christopher N. A. Willmer
Chris Willott
Junyu Zhang
Yongda Zhu
Abstract
Recently, a large number of compact sources at $z > 4$
with blue UV slopes and extremely red rest-frame optical slopes have been found in James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) extragalactic surveys. As a subsample of these sources, commonly called “little red dots” (LRDs), have been spectroscopically observed to host a broad-line active galactic nucleus (AGN), they have been the focus of multiple recent studies in an attempt to understand the origin of their UV and optical emission. Here, we assemble a sample of $123$
LRDs from the literature along with spectroscopic and photometric JWST-identified samples of AGNs to compare their colors and spectral slopes. We find that while obscured AGNs at $z < 6$
have highly dissimilar colors to LRDs, unobscured AGNs at $z < 6$
span a wide range of colors, with only a subsample showing colors similar to LRDs. At $z > 6$
, the majority of the unobscured AGNs that have been found in these samples are LRDs, but this may be related to the fact that these sources are at large bolometric luminosities. Because LRDs occupy a unique position in galaxy color space, they are more straightforward to target, and the large number of broad-line AGNs that do not have LRD colors and slopes are therefore underrepresented in many spectroscopic surveys because they are more difficult to pre-select. Current LRD selection techniques return a large and disparate population, including many sources having $2-5\ \mu\mathrm{m}$
colors impacted by emission line flux boosting in individual filters.
Type
Publication
eprint arXiv:2410.00100
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