A direct black-hole mass measurement in a little red dot at high redshift

Juodžbalis, Ignas, Marconcini, Cosimo, D’Eugenio, Francesco, Maiolino, Roberto, Marconi, Alessandro, Übler, Hannah, Scholtz, Jan, Ji, Xihan, Jones, Gareth C., Perna, Michele, Arribas, Santiago, Bennett, Jake S., Bromm, Volker, Bunker, Andrew J., Carniani, Stefano, Charlot, Stéphane, Cresci, Giovanni, Dayal, Pratika, Egami, Eiichi, Fabian, Andrew, Inayoshi, Kohei, Isobe, Yuki, Ivey, Lucy R., Koudmani, Sophie, Laporte, Nicolas, Liu, Boyuan, Lyu, Jianwei, Mazzolari, Giovanni, Monty, Stephanie, Parlanti, Eleonora, Pérez-González, Pablo G., Robertson, Brant, Schneider, Raffaella, Sijacki, Debora, Tacchella, Sandro, Trinca, Alessandro, Valiante, Rosa, Volonteri, Marta, Witstok, Joris and Zhang, Saiyang (2026) A direct black-hole mass measurement in a little red dot at high redshift. Nature, 653. pp. 1017-1021. ISSN 0028-0836
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Recent discoveries of faint active galactic nuclei (AGN) at the redshift frontier have revealed a plethora of broad Hα emitters with optically red continua, named little red dots (LRDs)1, which comprise 15–30% of the high-redshift broad-line AGN population2. Owing to their peculiar properties3, 4, 5–6, modelling LRDs with standard AGN scenarios has proven challenging. In particular, the validity of single-epoch virial mass estimates in determining the black-hole masses of LRDs has been called into question, with some models claiming that masses might be overestimated by up to two orders of magnitude7, 8, 9–10. Here we report a direct, dynamical black-hole mass measurement in a strongly lensed LRD at a redshift of 7.04. The combination of lensing with deep spectroscopic data reveals a rotation curve that is inconsistent with a nuclear star cluster, yet can be well explained by Keplerian rotation around a point mass of 50 million solar masses, consistent with virial black-hole mass estimates. The Keplerian rotation leaves little room for any stellar component in a host galaxy, as we conservatively infer MBH/M⁎ > 2 (where MBH is the black-hole mass and M⁎ is the stellar mass). Such a ‘naked’ black hole, together with its near-pristine environment11, indicates that this LRD is a massive black-hole seed caught in its earliest accretion phase.


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