Discovery of low-redshift analogues to "Little Red Dots" in DESI: A later evolutionary stage of compact LRDs?
Weiyu Ding, Xu Kong, Wei-Jian Guo, Hu Zou, Jialai Wang + 6 more
TLDR
DESI identifies low-redshift "Little Red Dots" analogues, suggesting they represent a later evolutionary stage of these compact, rapidly accreting systems.
Key contributions
- JWST discovered high-redshift "Little Red Dots" (LRDs) with unique spectral features.
- Five low-redshift LRD analogues were identified in DESI data (z=0.2-0.4).
- These analogues share SEDs and broad Balmer lines but differ in BPT diagram position and stellar mass.
- They may represent later evolutionary stages of LRDs or systems with related properties.
Why it matters
Understanding high-redshift "Little Red Dots" is crucial for galaxy evolution, but direct study is challenging. This paper identifies low-redshift analogues, offering a vital laboratory to explore their physical nature and evolutionary stages. This bridges observations across cosmic epochs.
Original Abstract
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has recently discovered a population of compact, red sources at z > 4 known as "Little Red Dots" (LRDs). They are characterized by their V-shaped continuum spectra and prominent broad Balmer emission lines. As their underlying physical nature remains debated and direct study at high-redshift is challenging; therefore, we seek to identify and characterize LRD analogues in the low-redshift universe to constrain their properties and potential evolutionary pathways. We identified five candidates at z = 0.2-0.4 from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) that exhibit spectral energy distributions (SEDs) and broad Balmer emission lines closely resembling their high-redshift counterparts. However, we find significant differences: our low-redshift sample occupies a different region on the Baldwin, Phillips \& Terlevich (BPT) diagram, and their stellar masses are significantly higher, suggesting a more substantial host galaxy contribution. These sources are not necessarily direct local analogues of high-redshift LRDs, but may represent later evolutionary stages of compact, rapidly accreting systems, or systems with related observational properties arising under different physical conditions. This sample provides a valuable laboratory for detailed follow-up studies to elucidate the nature of LRD-like phenomena.
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