SPURS: Evidence for Clumpy Neutral Envelopes and Ionized IGM Surrounding Little Red Dots in Abell 2744 from Ultra-Deep Rest-UV Spectroscopy
Abstract
Rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) spectra of Little Red Dots (LRDs) often show Lyα emission. Along with broad Balmer emission, LRDs are expected to produce broad Lyα emission. However, the large column density of neutral gas invoked to explain the Balmer break should significantly redshift and further broaden the Lyα line, making it challenging to detect without sensitive, moderate-resolution spectra. We present ultra-deep (29 hours) G140M JWST/NIRSpec observations covering the rest-UV of two LRDs in Abell2744 from the SPURS Cycle 4 Large Program. One of our targets is Abell2744-QSO1, a gravitationally-lensed LRD at z=7.04 with faint UV emission (M UV=-16.9), and the other source (UNCOVER-2476) is newly-confirmed at z=4.02 with a very bright UV continuum (M UV=-19.6). We find that Abell2744-QSO1 has a broad Lyα profile, along with narrow CIV, FeIIλ1786, and OIλ1302 emission. The Lyα profile suggests an origin similar to the broad Hα, but the line is considerably less redshifted than expected from existing dense gas models. We show that the line profile can be explained if the dense neutral gas is clumpy, allowing Lyα to escape by scattering off of the clump surfaces. We find that UNCOVER-2476 has narrow [NeIV] emission, indicating either a hard radiation field or shocks. We confirm two close neighbors with Lyα emission around Abell2744-QSO1, indicating it traces a dense environment that may have ionized its surrounding IGM. We suggest that LRDs may preferentially trace bubbles carved by their dense environments, contributing to the prevalence of Lyα in the population.
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