在最亮的小红点中确认的热尘埃和冷尘埃发射缺陷

David J. Setton, Jenny E. Greene, Justin S. Spilker, Christina C. Williams, Ivo Labbé, Yilun Ma, 马逸伦, Bingjie Wang, 王冰洁, Katherine E. Whitaker, Joel Leja, Anna de Graaff, Stacey Alberts, Rachel Bezanson, Leindert A. Boogaard, Gabriel Brammer, Sam E. Cutler, Nikko J. Cleri, Olivia R. Cooper, Pratika Dayal, Seiji Fujimoto, Lukas J. Furtak, Andy D. Goulding, Michaela Hirschmann, Vasily Kokorev, Michael V. Maseda, Ian McConachie, Jorryt Matthee, Tim B. Miller, Rohan P. Naidu, Pascal A. Oesch, Richard Pan, Sedona H. Price, Katherine A. Suess, John R. Weaver, Mengyuan Xiao, Yunchong Zhang and Adi Zitrin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

明亮的宽Hα发射和红色静止光谱能量分布(SEDs)是致密小红点(lrd)的标志,这意味着高度衰减的尘埃星暴和/或被遮挡的活动星系核(AGN)。然而,观测到的远红外(FIR)发射的缺乏已被证明难以与这些模型中隐含的衰减光度相协调。在这里,我们利用新的阿塔卡马大型毫米/亚毫米阵列成像,新的和现有的JWST/MIRI成像,以及两个剩余光学上最亮的lrd (z = 3.1和z = 4.47)的斯皮策/赫歇尔成像,对lrd的红外光度进行了迄今为止最强的限制。在λrest = 1-4 μm处的探测结果表明,在rest-IR中有平坦的斜率,排除了热(T > 500 K)尘埃的贡献。同样,FIR不检测排除任何明显的冷(T > 75 K)尘埃成分。假设能量平衡,这些观测结果与典型的FIR尘埃发射的尘埃星暴和类星体环面不一致,后者通常显示冷和热尘埃的混合物。此外,我们的[C ii]未探测到排除了典型的尘埃星暴。我们计算了经验最大的IR SEDs,发现两个lrd都必须在3σ水平上。这些限制与其他光学分光光度拟合的预测相矛盾,无论是星系,agn还是复合。lrd不太可能是高度粉尘染红的本质蓝色源,其粉尘温度分布不太可能避开当前的观测设施。相反,我们倾向于本质上更红的LRD SED模型,以减轻对强粉尘衰减的需求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Confirmed Deficit of Hot and Cold Dust Emission in the Most Luminous Little Red Dots
Luminous broad Hα emission and red rest-optical spectral energy distributions (SEDs) are the hallmark of compact little red dots (LRDs), implying highly attenuated dusty starbursts and/or obscured active galactic nuclei (AGN). However, the lack of observed far-infrared (FIR) emission has proved difficult to reconcile with the implied attenuated luminosity in these models. Here, we utilize deep new Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array imaging, new and existing JWST/MIRI imaging, and archival Spitzer/Herschel imaging of two of the rest-optically brightest LRDs (z = 3.1 and z = 4.47) to place the strongest constraints on the IR luminosity in LRDs to date. The detections at λrest = 1–4 μm imply flat slopes in the rest-IR, ruling out a contribution from hot (T ≳ 500 K) dust. Similarly, FIR nondetections rule out any appreciable cold (T ≲ 75 K) dust component. Assuming energy balance, these observations are inconsistent with the typical FIR dust emission of dusty starbursts and quasar tori, which usually show a mixture of cold and hot dust. Additionally, our [C ii] nondetections rule out typical dusty starbursts. We compute empirical maximum IR SEDs and find that both LRDs must have at the 3σ level. These limits are in tension with the predictions of rest-optical spectrophotometric fits, be they galaxy-only, AGN-only, or composite. It is unlikely that LRDs are highly dust-reddened intrinsically blue sources with a dust temperature distribution that conspires to avoid current observing facilities. Rather, we favor an intrinsically redder LRD SED model that alleviates the need for strong dust attenuation.
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