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RUBIES: JWST/NIRSpec Confirmation of an Infrared-luminous, Broad-line Little Red Dot with an Ionized Outflow

  • Bingjie Wang
  • , Anna de Graaff
  • , Rebecca L. Davies
  • , Jenny E. Greene
  • , Joel Leja
  • , Gabriel B. Brammer
  • , Andy D. Goulding
  • , Tim B. Miller
  • , Katherine A. Suess
  • , Andrea Weibel
  • , Christina C. Williams
  • , Rachel Bezanson
  • , Leindert A. Boogaard
  • , Nikko J. Cleri
  • , Michaela Hirschmann
  • , Harley Katz
  • , Ivo Labbé
  • , Michael V. Maseda
  • , Jorryt Matthee
  • , Ian McConachie
  • Rohan P. Naidu, Pascal A. Oesch, Hans Walter Rix, David J. Setton, Katherine E. Whitaker

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The JWST discovery of “little red dots” (LRDs) is reshaping our picture of the early Universe, yet the physical mechanisms driving their compact size and UV-optical colors remain elusive. Here, we report an unusually bright LRD (zspec = 3.1) observed as part of the RUBIES program. This LRD exhibits broad emission lines (FWHM ∼ 4000 km s−1), a blue UV continuum, a clear Balmer break, and a red continuum sampled out to rest-frame 4 μm with MIRI. We develop a new joint galaxy and active galactic nucleus (AGN) model within the Prospector Bayesian inference framework and perform spectrophotometric modeling using NIRCam, MIRI, and NIRSpec/Prism observations. Our fiducial model reveals a M* ∼ 109 M galaxy alongside a dust-reddened AGN driving the optical emission. Explaining the rest-frame optical color as a reddened AGN requires AV ≳ 3, suggesting that a great majority of the accretion disk energy is reradiated as dust emission. Yet, despite clear AGN signatures, we find a surprising lack of hot torus emission, which implies that either the dust emission in this object must be cold, or the red continuum must instead be driven by a massive, evolved stellar population of the host galaxy—seemingly inconsistent with the high-EW broad lines (Hα rest-frame EW ∼ 800 Å). The widths and luminosities of Pa-β, Pa-δ, Pa-γ, and Hα imply a modest black hole mass of MBH ∼ 108 M. Additionally, we identify a narrow blueshifted He i λ 1.083 μm absorption feature in NIRSpec/G395M spectra, signaling an ionized outflow with kinetic energy up to ∼1% the luminosity of the AGN. The low redshift of RUBIES-BLAGN-1, combined with the depth and richness of the JWST imaging and spectroscopic observations, provides a unique opportunity to build a physical model for these so-far mysterious LRDs, which may prove to be a crucial phase in the early formation of massive galaxies and their supermassive black holes.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number121
JournalAstrophysical Journal
Volume984
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - May 9 2025

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Astronomy and Astrophysics
  • Space and Planetary Science

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