A Comprehensive Photometric Selection of `Little Red Dots' in MIRI Fields: An IR-Bright LRD at z=3.1386 with Warm Dust Emission

Abstract

JWST has revealed a population of compact `Little Red Dots' (LRDs) at z4, with red rest-frame optical and blue UV colors. These objects are likely compact dusty starbursts or heavily reddened AGNs, playing a pivotal role in early black hole growth, dust production, and stellar assembly. We introduce a new photometric selection to identify LRDs over a broad range in redshifts and rest-frame UV-to-NIR colors enabling a more complete census of the population. This method identifies 248 LRDs with F444W<27 mag over 263 arcmin2 in the JADES, PRIMER-COSMOS, and UDS fields with MIRI coverage, increasing the number density by ×1.7 compared to previous samples, suggesting that previous census were underestimated. Most LRDs are detected in MIRI/F770W but only 7% (17) are detected in F1800W. We use MIRI-based rest-frame [1-3 μm] colors to trace dust emission. F1800W-detected LRDs have a median [1-3 μm]=1.5 mag, with a broad scatter indicative of diverse dust emission properties. About 20% exhibit [1-3 μm]<1 mag colors consistent with negligible dust emission, but the majority show significant dust emission at 3 μm (f dust3μ m0.8) from the galaxy ISM or a hot-dust-deficient AGN torus. A correlation between bluer UV-to-NIR colors and stronger IR emission suggests that the bluest LRDs may resemble unobscured QSOs. We report a LRD at z spec=3.1386, detected in MIRI, Spitzer/MIPS, and Herschel/PACS. Its IR SED rises steeply at λ rest>6~μm and peaks near 40~μm, providing the first direct evidence of warm dust emission (T=50-100 K) in a LRD.

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