Tentative detection of neutral gas in a Little Red Dot at z=4.46

Abstract

JWST has revealed a population of broad-line active galactic nuclei at z>4 with remarkably red colors, so-called "Little Red Dots." Ubiquitous Balmer breaks suggest that they harbor old stellar populations in massive, compact host galaxies. We present ALMA observations of three LRDs at z=3.10, 4.46, and 7.04, targeting molecular and neutral gas via CO(7-6) and [CI](2-1), respectively. We do not detect CO in any target, placing conservative limits on the host molecular gas mass 1-5×1010 M. We report the tentative (4.9σ) detection of the [CI](2-1) line in A2744-45924 (z=4.46), one of the brightest known LRDs. The [CI] line is narrow (FWHM 80 km s-1), implying a dynamical mass 1010 M, adopting conservative limits for the galaxy size. The dynamical mass limit is significantly lower than expected from the local M BH-M dyn relation, and is an order of magnitude below the stellar mass derived from SED fitting, potentially supporting a non-stellar origin of the Balmer break. These results, while tentative, paint a picture of LRDs that is markedly different than typical high-z quasars, which live in massive, gas-rich, and actively star-forming host galaxies.

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