BlackTHUNDER: Shedding light on a dormant and extreme little red dot at z=8.50

Gareth C. Jones, Hannah Übler, Roberto Maiolino, Xihan Ji, Alessandro Marconi, Francesco D'Eugenio, Santiago Arribas, Andrew J. Bunker, Stefano Carniani, Stéphane Charlot, Giovanni Cresci, Kohei Inayoshi, Yuki Isobe, Ignas Juodžbalis, Giovanni Mazzolari, Pablo G. Pérez-González, Michele Perna, Raffaella Schneider, Jan Scholtz, Sandro Tacchella

公開日: 2025/9/24

Abstract

Recent photometric surveys with JWST have revealed a significant population of mysterious objects with red colours, compact morphologies, frequent signs of active galactic nucleus (AGN) activity, and negligible X-ray emission. These 'Little Red Dots' (LRDs) have been explored through spectral and photometric studies, but their nature is still under debate. As part of the BlackTHUNDER survey, we have observed UNCOVER_20466, the second most distant LRD known (z=8.5), with the JWST/NIRSpec IFU. Previous JWST/NIRCam and JWST/NIRSpec MSA observations of this source revealed its LRD nature, as well as the presence of an AGN. Using our NIRSpec IFU data, we confirm that UNCOVER_20466 contains an overmassive black hole. However, our observed Balmer decrements imply negligible dust attenuation, resulting in a much lower Hbeta-based bolometric luminosity and Eddington luminosity (~10%) than previously found. Lyman-alpha emission is strongly detected, implying f_esc,Lya~30%. The extremely high [OIII]4363/Hgamma ratio is indicative of not only AGN photoionization and heating, but also extremely high densities (ne~10^7cm-3), suggesting that this black hole at such high redshift may be forming in an ultra-dense protogalaxy.

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