The missing hard photons of Little Red Dots: Their incident ionizing spectra resemble massive stars

Wang B, Leja J, Katz H, Inayoshi K, Cleri NJ, De Graaff A, Hviding RE, Van Dokkum P, Greene JE, Labbé I, Matthee JJ, Mcconachie I, Naidu RP, Nelson EJ. 2026. The missing hard photons of Little Red Dots: Their incident ionizing spectra resemble massive stars. The Astrophysical Journal. 1003(1), 10.

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Author
Wang, Bingjie; Leja, Joel; Katz, Harley; Inayoshi, Kohei; Cleri, Nikko J.; De Graaff, Anna; Hviding, Raphael E.; Van Dokkum, Pieter; Greene, Jenny E.; Labbé, Ivo; Matthee, Jorryt JISTA ; Mcconachie, Ian
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Abstract
The nature of little red dots (LRDs) has largely been investigated through their continuum emission, with lines assumed to arise from a broad-line region. In this paper, we instead use recombination lines to infer the intrinsic properties of the central engine. Our analysis first reveals a tension between the ionizing properties implied from Hα and He ii λ4686. The high Hα EWs require copious H-ionizing photons, more than the bluest active galactic nucleus (AGN) ionizing spectra can provide. In contrast, He ii emission is marginally detected, and its low EW is, at most, consistent with the softest AGN spectra. The low He ii/Hβ (∼10−2, <20× local AGN median) further points to an unusually soft ionizing spectrum. We extend our analysis to dense gas envelopes (quasi-star/black-hole star) and find that hydrogen recombination lines become optically thick and lose diagnostic power, but He ii remains optically thin and a robust tracer. Photoionization modeling with Cloudy rules out standard AGN accretion disk spectra. Alternative explanations include exotic AGN with red rest-optical emission, high average optical depth (>10) from gas/dust, and soft ionizing spectra with abundant H-ionizing photons, consistent with, e.g., a cold accretion disk or a composite of AGN and stars. The latter is an intriguing scenario since high hydrogen densities are highly conducive for star formation, and nuclear star clusters are found in the vicinity of local massive black holes. While previous studies have mostly focused on features dominated by the absorbing hydrogen cloud, the He ii-based diagnostic proposed here represents a crucial step toward understanding the central engine of LRDs.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2026-05-01
Journal Title
The Astrophysical Journal
Publisher
IOP Publishing
Acknowledgement
B.W. thanks Michael Eracleous for valuable discussions. B.W. and J.L. acknowledge support from JWST-GO-04233.009. B.W. also acknowledges support provided by NASA through Hubble Fellowship grant HST-HF2-51592.001 awarded by the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., for NASA, under the contract NAS 5-26555. K.I. acknowledges support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (12573015, W2532003), the Beijing Natural Science Foundation (IS25003), and the China Manned Space Program (CMS-CSST-2025-A09). R.E.H. acknowledges support by the German Aerospace Center (DLR) and the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWi) through program 50OR2403 “RUBIES.” This work is based on observations made with the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope. The data were obtained from the Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes at the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NASA contract NAS 5-03127 for JWST. These observations are associated with program # 1433, 2561, 4106, 4233, 5224, 6585. The specific observations analyzed can be accessed via DOI: 10.17909/9hpc-nc45. Computations for this research were performed on the Pennsylvania State University’s Institute for Computational and Data Sciences’ Roar supercomputer; and on computational resources managed and supported by Princeton Research Computing, a consortium of groups including the Princeton Institute for Computational Science and Engineering (PICSciE) and Research Computing at Princeton University. Some of the stellar spectra are retrieved from the POLLUX database (pollux.oreme.org) operated at LUPM (Université de Montpellier—CNRS, France) with the support of the PNPS and INSU. This publication made use of the NASA Astrophysical Data System for bibliographic information.
Volume
1003
Issue
1
Article Number
10
ISSN
eISSN
IST-REx-ID

Cite this

Wang B, Leja J, Katz H, et al. The missing hard photons of Little Red Dots: Their incident ionizing spectra resemble massive stars. The Astrophysical Journal. 2026;1003(1). doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ae5bab
Wang, B., Leja, J., Katz, H., Inayoshi, K., Cleri, N. J., De Graaff, A., … Nelson, E. J. (2026). The missing hard photons of Little Red Dots: Their incident ionizing spectra resemble massive stars. The Astrophysical Journal. IOP Publishing. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ae5bab
Wang, Bingjie, Joel Leja, Harley Katz, Kohei Inayoshi, Nikko J. Cleri, Anna De Graaff, Raphael E. Hviding, et al. “The Missing Hard Photons of Little Red Dots: Their Incident Ionizing Spectra Resemble Massive Stars.” The Astrophysical Journal. IOP Publishing, 2026. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ae5bab.
B. Wang et al., “The missing hard photons of Little Red Dots: Their incident ionizing spectra resemble massive stars,” The Astrophysical Journal, vol. 1003, no. 1. IOP Publishing, 2026.
Wang B, Leja J, Katz H, Inayoshi K, Cleri NJ, De Graaff A, Hviding RE, Van Dokkum P, Greene JE, Labbé I, Matthee JJ, Mcconachie I, Naidu RP, Nelson EJ. 2026. The missing hard photons of Little Red Dots: Their incident ionizing spectra resemble massive stars. The Astrophysical Journal. 1003(1), 10.
Wang, Bingjie, et al. “The Missing Hard Photons of Little Red Dots: Their Incident Ionizing Spectra Resemble Massive Stars.” The Astrophysical Journal, vol. 1003, no. 1, 10, IOP Publishing, 2026, doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ae5bab.
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