The Cliff: A Metal-Poor Little Red Dot Hosting an Overmassive Black Hole at $z = 3.55$
Lucy R. Ivey, Francesco D'Eugenio, Roberto Maiolino, Yuki Isobe, Ignas Juodžbalis + 16 more
TLDR
JWST observations of "The Cliff" at z=3.55 reveal a metal-poor galaxy hosting an overmassive black hole, challenging early universe BH growth models.
Key contributions
- JWST NIRSpec/IFU observed "The Cliff" at z=3.55, a metal-poor Little Red Dot with an overmassive BH.
- Discovered extremely low gas-phase metallicity ($Z \approx 0.017 \ Z_\odot$) using [OIII]/Hβ ratio and line non-detections.
- Its properties, including the overmassive BH, are reproduced by simulations requiring high seed masses ($10^4-10^5 M_\odot$).
- Such metal-poor, overmassive BH systems are rare in both observations and current simulations.
Why it matters
This study provides crucial observational evidence linking metallicity to early universe black hole growth. It highlights the existence of rare, overmassive black holes in metal-poor environments, challenging current models. This informs future simulations of BH formation and co-evolution.
Original Abstract
JWST has revealed a large population of massive black holes (BHs) in the early Universe with unusual properties which mark them as distinct from low-redshift active galactic nuclei. Such findings have prompted the development of new models of BH formation and growth, and of their co-evolution with host galaxies. Linking the gas-phase metallicity of BH environments to seed masses is key to understanding which evolutionary pathways could explain the population of JWST-discovered BHs. We present new high-resolution JWST NIRSpec/IFU observations covering the rest-frame optical emission lines of a Little Red Dot (LRD) at $z=3.55$, known as The Cliff, from the `Red Unknowns: Bright Infrared Extragalactic Survey' (RUBIES). We find evidence for low metallicity ($Z=0.017\pm0.004 \ Z_\odot$) based on the low narrow-line [OIII]$\lambda5007$/H$β$ ratio, supported by the non-detection of low-ionisation emission lines such as [OII]$λ\lambda3727,3729$ and [NII]$λ\lambda6548,6583$. We find that the observed properties of The Cliff, including its overmassive BH, can be reproduced by some simulations of black hole growth and evolution down to $z\sim3.5$. However, these simulation runs require high seed masses ($10^4 - 10^5\ M_\odot$) and appear as rarely in the simulation volume as in the RUBIES survey volume over redshifts $3<z<4$, highlighting the unusual nature of The Cliff. Future simulations and numerical models will help to uncover how such a metal poor system managed to develop a massive black hole and persist to such low redshift.
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