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COSMOS-Web: The over-abundance and physical nature of 'little red dots'--Implications for early galaxy and SMBH assembly

Authors :
Akins, Hollis B.
Casey, Caitlin M.
Lambrides, Erini
Allen, Natalie
Andika, Irham T.
Brinch, Malte
Champagne, Jaclyn B.
Cooper, Olivia
Ding, Xuheng
Drakos, Nicole E.
Faisst, Andreas
Finkelstein, Steven L.
Franco, Maximilien
Fujimoto, Seiji
Gentile, Fabrizio
Gillman, Steven
Gozaliasl, Ghassem
Harish, Santosh
Hayward, Christopher C.
Hirschmann, Michaela
Ilbert, Olivier
Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S.
Kocevski, Dale D.
Koekemoer, Anton M.
Kokorev, Vasily
Liu, Daizhong
Long, Arianna S.
McCracken, Henry Joy
McKinney, Jed
Onoue, Masafusa
Paquereau, Louise
Renzini, Alvio
Rhodes, Jason
Robertson, Brant E.
Shuntov, Marko
Silverman, John D.
Tanaka, Takumi S.
Toft, Sune
Trakhtenbrot, Benny
Valentino, Francesco
Zavala, Jorge
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

JWST has revealed a population of compact and extremely red galaxies at $z>4$, which likely host active galactic nuclei (AGN). We present a sample of 434 ``little red dots'' (LRDs), selected from the 0.54 deg$^2$ COSMOS-Web survey. We fit galaxy and AGN SED models to derive redshifts and physical properties; the sample spans $z\sim5$-$9$ after removing brown dwarf contaminants. We consider two extreme physical scenarios: either LRDs are all AGN, and their continuum emission is dominated by the accretion disk, or they are all compact star-forming galaxies, and their continuum is dominated by stars. If LRDs are AGN-dominated, our sample exhibits bolometric luminosities $\sim10^{45-47}$ erg\,s$^{-1}$, spanning the gap between JWST AGN in the literature and bright, rare quasars. We derive a bolometric luminosity function (LF) $\sim100$ times the (UV-selected) quasar LF, implying a non-evolving black hole accretion density of $\sim10^{-4}$ M$_\odot$ yr$^{-1}$ Mpc$^{-3}$ from $z\sim2$-$9$. By contrast, if LRDs are dominated by star formation, we derive stellar masses $\sim10^{8.5-10}\,M_\odot$. MIRI/F770W is key to deriving accurate stellar masses; without it, we derive a mass function inconsistent with $\Lambda$CDM. The median stellar mass profile is broadly consistent with the maximal stellar mass surface densities seen in the nearby universe, though the most massive $\sim50$\% of objects exceed this limit, requiring substantial AGN contribution to the continuum. Nevertheless, stacking all available X-ray, mid-IR, far-IR/sub-mm, and radio data yields non-detections. Whether dominated by dusty AGN, compact star-formation, or both, the high masses/luminosities and remarkable abundance of LRDs implies a dominant mode of early galaxy/SMBH growth.<br />Comment: 27 pages, 13 figures. Submitted to ApJ, comments welcome! Data access at https://github.com/hollisakins/akins24_cw

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2406.10341
Document Type :
Working Paper