Naidu, Rohan P. and Oesch, Pascal A. and Dokkum, Pieter van and Nelson, Erica J. and Suess, Katherine A. and Brammer, Gabriel and Whitaker, Katherine E. and Illingworth, Garth and Bouwens, Rychard and Tacchella, Sandro and Matthee, Jorryt and Allen, Natalie and Bezanson, Rachel and Conroy, Charlie and Labbe, Ivo and Leja, Joel and Leonova, Ecaterina and Magee, Dan and Price, Sedona H. and Setton, David J. and Strait, Victoria and Stefanon, Mauro and Toft, Sune and Weaver, John R. and Weibel, Andrea (2022) Two Remarkably Luminous Galaxy Candidates at z ≈ 10–12 Revealed by JWST. The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 940 (1). L14. ISSN 2041-8205
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Abstract
The first few 100 Myr at z > 10 mark the last major uncharted epoch in the history of the universe, where only a single galaxy (GN-z11 at z ≈ 11) is currently spectroscopically confirmed. Here we present a search for luminous z > 10 galaxies with JWST/NIRCam photometry spanning ≈1–5 μm and covering 49 arcmin2 from the public JWST Early Release Science programs (CEERS and GLASS). Our most secure candidates are two MUV ≈ −21 systems: GLASS-z12 and GLASS-z10. These galaxies display abrupt ≳1.8 mag breaks in their spectral energy distributions (SEDs), consistent with complete absorption of flux bluewards of Lyα that is redshifted to $z={12.4}_{-0.3}^{+0.1}$ and $z={10.4}_{-0.5}^{+0.4}$. Lower redshift interlopers such as quiescent galaxies with strong Balmer breaks would be comfortably detected at >5σ in multiple bands where instead we find no flux. From SED modeling we infer that these galaxies have already built up ∼109 solar masses in stars over the ≲300–400 Myr after the Big Bang. The brightness of these sources enable morphological constraints. Tantalizingly, GLASS-z10 shows a clearly extended exponential light profile, potentially consistent with a disk galaxy of r50 ≈ 0.7 kpc. These sources, if confirmed, join GN-z11 in defying number density forecasts for luminous galaxies based on Schechter UV luminosity functions, which require a survey area >10× larger than we have studied here to find such luminous sources at such high redshifts. They extend evidence from lower redshifts for little or no evolution in the bright end of the UV luminosity function into the cosmic dawn epoch, with implications for just how early these galaxies began forming. This, in turn, suggests that future deep JWST observations may identify relatively bright galaxies to much earlier epochs than might have been anticipated.
Item Type: | Article |
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Subjects: | Digital Open Archives > Physics and Astronomy |
Depositing User: | Unnamed user with email support@digiopenarchives.com |
Date Deposited: | 21 Apr 2023 06:18 |
Last Modified: | 03 Oct 2024 04:12 |
URI: | http://geographical.openuniversityarchive.com/id/eprint/950 |