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http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12386/36162
Title: | The nature of an ultra-faint galaxy in the cosmic dark ages seen with JWST | Authors: | Roberts-Borsani, Guido Treu, Tommaso Chen, Wenlei Morishita, Takahiro VANZELLA, Eros Zitrin, Adi BERGAMINI, PIETRO CASTELLANO, Marco FONTANA, Adriano Glazebrook, Karl Grillo, Claudio Kelly, Patrick L. MERLIN, Emiliano Nanayakkara, Themiya PARIS, Diego Rosati, Piero YANG, LILAN Acebron, Ana BONCHI, Andrea Boyett, Kit Bradač, Maruša Brammer, Gabriel Broadhurst, Tom CALABRO', Antonello Diego, Jose M. Dressler, Alan Furtak, Lukas J. Filippenko, Alexei V. Henry, Alaina Koekemoer, Anton M. Leethochawalit, Nicha Malkan, Matthew A. Mason, Charlotte MERCURIO, Amata Metha, Benjamin PENTERICCI, Laura Pierel, Justin Rieck, Steven Roy, Namrata SANTINI, Paola Strait, Victoria Strausbaugh, Robert Trenti, Michele VULCANI, Benedetta Wang, Lifan Wang, Xin Windhorst, Rogier A. |
Issue Date: | 2023 | Journal: | NATURE | Number: | 618 | Issue: | 7965 | First Page: | 480 | Abstract: | In the first billion years after the Big Bang, sources of ultraviolet (UV) photons are believed to have ionized intergalactic hydrogen, rendering the Universe transparent to UV radiation. Galaxies brighter than the characteristic luminosity L* (refs. 1,2) do not provide enough ionizing photons to drive this cosmic reionization. Fainter galaxies are thought to dominate the photon budget; however, they are surrounded by neutral gas that prevents the escape of the Lyman-α photons, which has been the dominant way to identify them so far. JD1 was previously identified as a triply-imaged galaxy with a magnification factor of 13 provided by the foreground cluster Abell 2744 (ref. 3), and a photometric redshift of z ≈ 10. Here we report the spectroscopic confirmation of this very low luminosity (≈0.05 L*) galaxy at z = 9.79, observed 480 Myr after the Big Bang, by means of the identification of the Lyman break and redward continuum, as well as multiple ≳4σ emission lines, with the Near-InfraRed Spectrograph (NIRSpec) and Near-InfraRed Camera (NIRCam) instruments. The combination of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) and gravitational lensing shows that this ultra-faint galaxy (M UV = −17.35)—with a luminosity typical of the sources responsible for cosmic reionization—has a compact (≈150 pc) and complex morphology, low stellar mass (107.19 M ⊙) and subsolar (≈0.6 Z ⊙) gas-phase metallicity. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12386/36162 | URL: | https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-05994-w https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/85159595529 |
ISSN: | 0028-0836 | DOI: | 10.1038/s41586-023-05994-w | Fulltext: | open |
Appears in Collections: | 1.01 Articoli in rivista |
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File | Description | Size | Format | |
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2210.15639v2.pdf | preprint | 8.8 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
s41586-023-05994-w.pdf | [Administrators only] | 3.75 MB | Adobe PDF |
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