High-resolution spectra show Balmer absorption in 4/10 LRDs with blue-shifted velocities and exponential wings, supporting a model of co-located partial-covering gas with inflow/outflow gradients.
Wings of little dots: Exponential broad lines from a stratified BLR
7 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
We investigate the origin of the broad exponential wings observed in a significant fraction of the Halpha profiles of JWST-discovered little red dots (LRDs) and little blue dots (LBDs). Recent studies have shown that exponential broad-line profiles are not a prerogative of LRDs, are often also present in LBDs, and need not imply that electron scattering is the dominant broadening mechanism in every source. Motivated by our unification picture in which LRDs are the dust-reddened, high-inclination counterparts of compact blue broad-line AGNs, we model the broad Balmer emission with a virialized, radially stratified broad-line region (BLR). In this framework, the observed profile is the luminosity-weighted superposition of clouds spanning a range of radii and therefore a range of characteristic virial velocities. We show that such a stratified BLR can reproduce the extended exponential-like wings observed in three representative LRDs, without requiring electron scattering to be the primary origin of the broad wings. Our results support a picture in which the broad wings and the line cores encode different physics: the wings arise primarily from virial BLR stratification, whereas the cores retain additional imprints of absorption and radiative transfer in dense gas. The successful fits further suggest that the cloud radial distribution peaks near the dust sublimation radius, while the exponential wings are shaped by the line-emitting inner BLR shells where the higher virial velocities produce the high-velocity tails. This offers a simple physical explanation for the exponential wings of little dots, without invoking exotic new components or scenarios.
years
2026 7verdicts
UNVERDICTED 7representative citing papers
LRDs are reinterpreted as intermediate-mass super-Eddington systems with wind-driven pseudo-photospheres that explain their spectra and imply engine masses below 10^5 solar masses rather than overmassive black holes.
LRDs are interpreted as high-inclination hyper-Eddington accreting SMBHs analogous to SS 433, with V-shaped SEDs, X-ray weakness, and Balmer breaks emerging from disk self-shielding geometry.
Narrow-line diagnostics on ~20 LRDs indicate that stellar photoionization alone cannot explain the observed ratios in many objects, implying anisotropic ionizing radiation from complex gas geometry.
JWST data on LRDs and LBDs show AGN-like excitation, strong Lyα with broad components, and X-ray weakness, implying clumpy or equatorial geometries around growing black holes rather than complete gas envelopes.
Simulations show heavy-seed formation with BH-BH mergers or Bondi accretion under weak feedback can assemble 10^6-10^7 solar mass black holes at z greater than or equal to 9.
Number density of LRDs with L_bol ≳ 3×10^44 erg s^{-1} shows no evolution at z>2 and is ~350 times higher than model predictions at cosmic noon.
citing papers explorer
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OCEANS of Absorption: High-resolution NIRSpec Spectroscopy Reveals Diverse Balmer-line Absorption in Little Red Dots
High-resolution spectra show Balmer absorption in 4/10 LRDs with blue-shifted velocities and exponential wings, supporting a model of co-located partial-covering gas with inflow/outflow gradients.
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Little Red Dots as Intermediate Mass, Super-Eddington Engines: Insights from Type IIn Supernovae and The 1837-1856 Great Eruption of $\eta$ Carinae
LRDs are reinterpreted as intermediate-mass super-Eddington systems with wind-driven pseudo-photospheres that explain their spectra and imply engine masses below 10^5 solar masses rather than overmassive black holes.
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Constraints on the Gas Geometry Surrounding Little Red Dots through Narrow-Line Diagnostics
Narrow-line diagnostics on ~20 LRDs indicate that stellar photoionization alone cannot explain the observed ratios in many objects, implying anisotropic ionizing radiation from complex gas geometry.
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Little Red and Blue Dots: AGN-excited narrow lines, Lyman-$\alpha$ emission, and resemblance to standard quasars
JWST data on LRDs and LBDs show AGN-like excitation, strong Lyα with broad components, and X-ray weakness, implying clumpy or equatorial geometries around growing black holes rather than complete gas envelopes.
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Learning the Universe at High Redshifts: Impact of Accretion Modeling on Early Black Hole Growth
Simulations show heavy-seed formation with BH-BH mergers or Bondi accretion under weak feedback can assemble 10^6-10^7 solar mass black holes at z greater than or equal to 9.
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No evolution in the number density of little red dots from cosmic dawn to cosmic noon
Number density of LRDs with L_bol ≳ 3×10^44 erg s^{-1} shows no evolution at z>2 and is ~350 times higher than model predictions at cosmic noon.