_version_ 1866912940341329920
author Torralba, Alberto
Matthee, Jorryt
Pezzulli, Gabriele
Naidu, Rohan P.
Ishikawa, Yuzo
Brammer, Gabriel B.
Chang, Seok-Jun
Chisholm, John
de Graaff, Anna
D'Eugenio, Francesco
Di Cesare, Claudia
Eilers, Anna-Christina
Greene, Jenny E.
Gronke, Max
Iani, Edoardo
Kokorev, Vasily
Kotiwale, Gauri
Kramarenko, Ivan
Ma, Yilun
Mascia, Sara
Navarrete, Benjamín
Nelson, Erica
Oesch, Pascal
Simcoe, Robert A.
Wuyts, Stijn
author_facet Torralba, Alberto
Matthee, Jorryt
Pezzulli, Gabriele
Naidu, Rohan P.
Ishikawa, Yuzo
Brammer, Gabriel B.
Chang, Seok-Jun
Chisholm, John
de Graaff, Anna
D'Eugenio, Francesco
Di Cesare, Claudia
Eilers, Anna-Christina
Greene, Jenny E.
Gronke, Max
Iani, Edoardo
Kokorev, Vasily
Kotiwale, Gauri
Kramarenko, Ivan
Ma, Yilun
Mascia, Sara
Navarrete, Benjamín
Nelson, Erica
Oesch, Pascal
Simcoe, Robert A.
Wuyts, Stijn
contents The population of the Little Red Dots (LRDs) may represent a key phase of supermassive black hole (SMBH) growth. A cocoon of dense excited gas is emerging as key component to explain the most striking properties of LRDs, such as strong Balmer breaks and Balmer absorption, as well as the weak IR emission. To dissect the structure of LRDs, we analyze new deep JWST/NIRSpec PRISM and G395H spectra of FRESCO-GN-9771, one of the most luminous known LRDs at $z=5.5$. These reveal a strong Balmer break, broad Balmer lines and very narrow [O III] emission. We unveil a forest of optical [Fe II] lines, which we argue is emerging from a dense ($n_{\rm H}=10^{9-10}$ cm$^{-3}$) warm layer with electron temperature $T_{\rm e}\approx7000$ K. The broad wings of H$α$ and H$β$ have an exponential profile due to electron scattering in this same layer. The high $\rm Hα:Hβ:Hγ$ flux ratio of $\approx10.4:1:0.14$ is an indicator of collisional excitation and resonant scattering dominating the Balmer line emission. A narrow H$γ$ component, unseen in the other two Balmer lines due to outshining by the broad components, could trace the ISM of a normal host galaxy with a star formation rate $\sim5$ M$_{\odot}$ yr$^{-1}$. The warm layer is mostly opaque to Balmer transitions, producing a characteristic P-Cygni profile in the line centers suggesting outflowing motions. This same layer is responsible for shaping the Balmer break. The broad-band spectrum can be reasonably matched by a simple photoionized slab model that dominates the $λ>1500$ Å continuum and a low mass ($\sim10^8$ M$_{\odot}$) galaxy that could explain the narrow [O III], with only subdominant contribution to the UV continuum. Our findings indicate that Balmer lines are not directly tracing gas kinematics near the SMBH and that the BH mass scale is likely much lower than virial indicators suggest.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2510_00103
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The warm outer layer of a Little Red Dot as the source of [Fe II] and collisional Balmer lines with scattering wings
Torralba, Alberto
Matthee, Jorryt
Pezzulli, Gabriele
Naidu, Rohan P.
Ishikawa, Yuzo
Brammer, Gabriel B.
Chang, Seok-Jun
Chisholm, John
de Graaff, Anna
D'Eugenio, Francesco
Di Cesare, Claudia
Eilers, Anna-Christina
Greene, Jenny E.
Gronke, Max
Iani, Edoardo
Kokorev, Vasily
Kotiwale, Gauri
Kramarenko, Ivan
Ma, Yilun
Mascia, Sara
Navarrete, Benjamín
Nelson, Erica
Oesch, Pascal
Simcoe, Robert A.
Wuyts, Stijn
Astrophysics of Galaxies
The population of the Little Red Dots (LRDs) may represent a key phase of supermassive black hole (SMBH) growth. A cocoon of dense excited gas is emerging as key component to explain the most striking properties of LRDs, such as strong Balmer breaks and Balmer absorption, as well as the weak IR emission. To dissect the structure of LRDs, we analyze new deep JWST/NIRSpec PRISM and G395H spectra of FRESCO-GN-9771, one of the most luminous known LRDs at $z=5.5$. These reveal a strong Balmer break, broad Balmer lines and very narrow [O III] emission. We unveil a forest of optical [Fe II] lines, which we argue is emerging from a dense ($n_{\rm H}=10^{9-10}$ cm$^{-3}$) warm layer with electron temperature $T_{\rm e}\approx7000$ K. The broad wings of H$α$ and H$β$ have an exponential profile due to electron scattering in this same layer. The high $\rm Hα:Hβ:Hγ$ flux ratio of $\approx10.4:1:0.14$ is an indicator of collisional excitation and resonant scattering dominating the Balmer line emission. A narrow H$γ$ component, unseen in the other two Balmer lines due to outshining by the broad components, could trace the ISM of a normal host galaxy with a star formation rate $\sim5$ M$_{\odot}$ yr$^{-1}$. The warm layer is mostly opaque to Balmer transitions, producing a characteristic P-Cygni profile in the line centers suggesting outflowing motions. This same layer is responsible for shaping the Balmer break. The broad-band spectrum can be reasonably matched by a simple photoionized slab model that dominates the $λ>1500$ Å continuum and a low mass ($\sim10^8$ M$_{\odot}$) galaxy that could explain the narrow [O III], with only subdominant contribution to the UV continuum. Our findings indicate that Balmer lines are not directly tracing gas kinematics near the SMBH and that the BH mass scale is likely much lower than virial indicators suggest.
title The warm outer layer of a Little Red Dot as the source of [Fe II] and collisional Balmer lines with scattering wings
topic Astrophysics of Galaxies
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.00103