2023
DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/acfeec
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Little Red Dots or Brown Dwarfs? NIRSpec Discovery of Three Distant Brown Dwarfs Masquerading as NIRCam-selected Highly Reddened Active Galactic Nuclei

Danial Langeroodi,
Jens Hjorth

Abstract: Cold, substellar objects such as brown dwarfs have long been recognized as contaminants in color-selected samples of active galactic nuclei (AGNs). In particular, their near- to mid-infrared colors (1–5 μm) can closely resemble the V-shaped (f λ ) spectra of highly reddened accreting supermassive black holes (“little red dots”), especially at 6 < z < 7. Recently, a NIRCam-selected sample of little red dots over 45 arcmin2 has been followed up with… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

2
9
0

Year Published

2024
2024
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
8

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 14 publications
(11 citation statements)
references
References 44 publications
2
9
0
Order By: Relevance
“…Section 5 summarizes our results. We note that these sources and the analysis of the data presented here have also been reported contemporaneously by Langeroodi & Hjorth (2023).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 65%
“…Section 5 summarizes our results. We note that these sources and the analysis of the data presented here have also been reported contemporaneously by Langeroodi & Hjorth (2023).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 65%
“…In this section we briefly describe the UNCOVER survey (Section 2.1 Bezanson et al 2022) and the Micro-Shutter Assembly (MSA)/PRISM spectroscopy and reductions in Section 2.2. Many exciting results have already come from the PRISM spectroscopy of the compact red sources, including a triply imaged z = 7 AGN (Furtak et al 2023b), a broad-line AGN at z = 8.5 (Fujimoto et al 2023a;Kokorev et al 2023), and three brown dwarfs which show similar SEDs as red AGN (Burgasser et al 2024;Langeroodi & Hjorth 2023). We have also reported two z > 12 galaxies (Wang et al 2023), and some of the faintest known targets in the epoch of reionization (Atek et al 2023a).…”
Section: Data Sample and Spectroscopic Follow-upmentioning
confidence: 58%
“…One obvious contaminant is brown dwarf stars. A simple color cut, excluding all sources bluer than F115W − F200W < −0.5 (blue box in Figure 4), would remove the majority of brown dwarfs from high-z galaxy selections in high-latitude deep fields (see also Langeroodi & Hjorth 2023). Based on the simulations from Burgasser et al (2024) in the UNCOVER area we expect ∼5 low-metallicity halo brown dwarfs, expected to have the bluest F150W − F200W colors (see Figure 4).…”
Section: Yield and Contaminantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the same time, brown dwarfs also exhibit an upturn in their SEDs starting around 3.0 μm and peaking at ∼4.5 μm, which leads to red LW colors. Brown dwarf candidates have already been identified photometrically due to their peculiar blue-red SEDs using color-color thresholds similar to the ERO selection criteria (e.g., Hainline et al 2023;Holwerda et al 2023;Nonino et al 2023;Wang et al 2023), and recent NIRSpec observations have confirmed the stellar nature of handful of them (Langeroodi et al 2023;Burgasser et al 2024).…”
Section: Brown Dwarf Contaminationmentioning
confidence: 99%