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result(s) for
"Arrabal Haro, Pablo"
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A First Look at the Abundance Pattern—O/H, C/O, and Ne/O—in z > 7 Galaxies with JWST/NIRSpec
2022
We analyze the rest-frame near-UV and optical nebular spectra of three z > 7 galaxies from the Early Release Observations taken with the Near-Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec) on the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). These three high-z galaxies show the detection of several strong emission nebular lines, including the temperature-sensitive [O iii] λ4363 line, allowing us to directly determine the nebular conditions and abundances for O/H, C/O, and Ne/O. We derive O/H abundances and ionization parameters that are generally consistent with other recent analyses. We analyze the mass–metallicity relationship (i.e., slope) and its redshift evolution by comparing between the three z > 7 galaxies and local star-forming galaxies. We also detect the C iii] λλ1907, 1909 emission in a z > 8 galaxy from which we determine the most distant C/O abundance to date. This valuable detection of log(C/O) = −0.83 ± 0.38 provides the first test of C/O redshift evolution out to high redshift. For neon, we use the high-ionization [Ne iii] λ3869 line to measure the first Ne/O abundances at z > 7, finding no evolution in this α-element ratio. We explore the tentative detection of [Fe ii] and [Fe iii] lines in a z > 8 galaxy, which would indicate a rapid buildup of metals. Importantly, we demonstrate that properly flux-calibrated and higher-S/N spectra are crucial to robustly determine the abundance pattern in z > 7 galaxies with NIRSpec/JWST.
Journal Article
A Strong He ii λ1640 Emitter with an Extremely Blue UV Spectral Slope at z = 8.16: Presence of Population III Stars?
2024
Cosmic hydrogen reionization and cosmic production of the first metals are major phase transitions of the Universe occurring during the first billion years after the Big Bang; however, these are still underexplored observationally. Using the JWST/NIRSpec prism spectroscopy, we report the discovery of a sub-L * galaxy at z spec = 8.1623 ± 0.0007, dubbed RX J2129–z8He II, via the detection of a series of strong rest-frame UV/optical nebular emission lines and the clear Lyman break. RX J2129–z8He II shows a pronounced UV continuum with an extremely steep (i.e., blue) spectral slope of β=−2.53−0.07+0.06 , the steepest among all spectroscopically confirmed galaxies at z spec ≳ 7, in support of its very hard ionizing spectrum that could lead to a significant leakage of its ionizing flux. Therefore, RX J2129–z8He II is representative of the key galaxy population driving the cosmic reionization. More importantly, we detect a strong He II λ1640 emission line in its spectrum, one of the highest redshifts at which such a line is robustly detected. Its high rest-frame equivalent width (EW = 21 ± 4 Å) and extreme flux ratios with respect to UV metal and Balmer lines raise the possibility that part of RX J2129–z8He II’s stellar population could be Pop III (Pop III)-like. Through careful photoionization modeling, we show that the physically calibrated phenomenological models of the ionizing spectra of Pop III stars with strong mass loss can successfully reproduce the emission line flux ratios observed in RX J2129–z8He II. Assuming the Eddington limit, the total mass of the Pop III stars within this system is estimated to be 7.8 ± 1.4 × 105 M ⊙. To date, this galaxy presents the most compelling case in the early Universe where trace Pop III stars might coexist with metal-enriched populations.
Journal Article
Evidence of Extreme Ionization Conditions and Low Metallicity in GHZ2/GLASS-Z12 from a Combined Analysis of NIRSpec and MIRI Observations
by
Bakx, Tom J. L. C
,
Finkelstein, Steven L
,
Burgarella, Denis
in
Active galactic nuclei
,
Analogs
,
Emission lines
2024
GHZ2/GLASS-z12, one of the most distant galaxies found in JWST observations, has been recently observed with both the NIRSpec and MIRI spectrographs, establishing a spectroscopic redshift z spec = 12.34 and making it the first system at z > 10 with complete spectroscopic coverage from rest-frame UV to optical wavelengths. This galaxy is identified as a strong C iv λ1549 emitter (EW = 46 Å) with many other detected emission lines, such as N iv] λ1488, He ii λ1640, O iii] λ λ1661,1666, N iii] λ1750, C iii] λ λ1907,1909, [O ii] λ λ3726,3729, [Ne iii] λ3869, [O iii] λ λ4959,5007, and Hα, including a remarkable detection of the O iii Bowen fluorescence line at rest frame λ = 3133 Å. We analyze in this paper the joint NIRSpec + MIRI spectral data set. Combining six optical strong-line diagnostics (namely R2, R3, R23, O32, Ne3O2, and Ne3O2Hd), we find extreme-ionization conditions, with log10 ([O III] λ λ4959,5007/[O II] λ λ3726,3729) = 1.39 ± 0.19 and log10 ([Ne III] λ3869/[O II] λ λ3726,3729) = 0.37 ± 0.18 in stark excess compared to typical values in the interstellar medium (ISM) at lower redshifts. These line properties are compatible either with an active galactic nucleus (AGN) or with a compact, very dense star-forming environment (ΣSFR ≃ 102–103 M ⊙ yr−1 kpc−2 and ΣM* ≃ 104–105 M ⊙ pc−2), with a high ionization parameter (log10(U) =−1.75 ± 0.16), a high ionizing photon production efficiency log(ξion)=25.7−0.1+0.3 , and a low gas-phase metallicity (also confirmed by the direct, T e method) ranging between 4% and 11% Z ⊙, indicating a rapid chemical enrichment of the ISM in the past few megayears. These properties also suggest that a substantial amount of ionizing photons (∼10%) are leaking outside of GHZ2 and starting to reionize the surrounding intergalactic medium, possibly due to strong radiation-driven winds. The general lessons learned from GHZ2 are the following: (i) the UV-to-optical combined nebular indicators are broadly in agreement with UV-only or optical-only indicators; (ii) UV+optical diagnostics fail to discriminate between an AGN and star formation in a low-metallicity, high-density, and extreme-ionization environment; and (iii) comparing the nebular line ratios with local analogs may be approaching its limits at z ≳ 10, as this approach is potentially challenged by the unique conditions of star formation experienced by galaxies at these extreme redshifts.
Journal Article
Identifying Galaxy Mergers in Simulated CEERS NIRCam Images Using Random Forests
by
Finkelstein, Steven L
,
Yung, L. Y. Aaron
,
Snyder, Gregory F
in
Classification
,
Galactic evolution
,
Galaxies
2023
Identifying merging galaxies is an important—but difficult—step in galaxy evolution studies. We present random forest (RF) classifications of galaxy mergers from simulated JWST images based on various standard morphological parameters. We describe (a) constructing the simulated images from IllustrisTNG and the Santa Cruz SAM and modifying them to mimic future CEERS observations and nearly noiseless observations, (b) measuring morphological parameters from these images, and (c) constructing and training the RFs using the merger history information for the simulated galaxies available from IllustrisTNG. The RFs correctly classify ∼60% of non-merging and merging galaxies across 0.5 < z < 4.0. Rest-frame asymmetry parameters appear more important for lower-redshift merger classifications, while rest-frame bulge and clump parameters appear more important for higher-redshift classifications. Adjusting the classification probability threshold does not improve the performance of the forests. Finally, the shape and slope of the resulting merger fraction and merger rate derived from the RF classifications match with theoretical Illustris predictions but are underestimated by a factor of ∼0.5.
Journal Article
The BoRG-JWST Survey: Program Overview and First Confirmations of Luminous Reionization-era Galaxies from Pure-parallel Observations
by
Leung, Gene C. K
,
Finkelstein, Steven L
,
Yung, L. Y. Aaron
in
Active galactic nuclei
,
Emission
,
Fillers
2025
We present the BoRG-JWST survey, a combination of two JWST Cycle 1 programs aimed at obtaining NIRSpec spectroscopy of representative, UV-bright 7 < z < 10 galaxy candidates across 22 independent sight lines selected from Hubble/WFC3 pure-parallel observations. We confirm the high-z nature of 12 out of 21 observed primary targets through low-resolution prism observations, with the rest revealing themselves unsurprisingly to be z ∼ 1–3 interlopers, brown dwarfs, or yielding inconclusive results. From the Multi Shutter Array (MSA) observations, we confirm an additional nine filler sources at z > 5, highlighting the large abundance of high-redshift galaxies even in individual WFC3 pointings. The primary sample spans the absolute magnitude range −20.4 mag < MUV < −22.4 mag and harbors UV continuum slopes of β ≃ −2.5 to −2.0, representing some of the most luminous z > 7 sources currently known and comparable to the brightest NIRCam sources at z > 10. Prominent [O iii]+Hβ lines are found across the full sample, while a stack of sources reveals a plethora of other rest-optical lines and additional rest-UV C III] 1909 Å emission. Despite their luminosities, none of the low-resolution spectra display evidence for type 1 active galactic nucleus activity based on a search for broad-line emission. Lastly, we present a spectroscopic data release of 188 confirmed 0.5 ≲ z ≲ 5.0 sources from filler MSA observations, highlighting the legacy value of the survey and a representative benchmark for comparisons to deep field observations.
Journal Article
Emission-line Diagnostics at z > 4: O iiiλ4364/Hγ versus Ne iiiλ3870/O iiλ3730
by
Simons, Raymond C
,
Davis, Kelcey
,
Brooks, Madisyn
in
Active galactic nuclei
,
Emission
,
Emission lines
2025
We use JWST Near-Infrared Spectrograph observations from the Cosmic Evolution Early Release survey, GLASS-JWST ERS (GLASS), and JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey to measure rest-frame optical emission-line ratios of 89 galaxies at z > 4. The stacked spectra of galaxies with and without a broad-line feature reveal a difference in the [O iii]λ 4364 and Hγ ratios. This motivated our investigation of the [O iii]λ4364/Hγ versus [Ne iii]/[O ii] diagram. We define two active galactic nucleus (AGN)/star formation (SF) classification lines based on 21,048 Sloan Digital Sky Survey galaxies at z ∼ 0. After applying a redshift correction to the AGN/SF lines, we find 69.2% of broad-line active galactic nuclei (BLAGN) continue to land in the AGN region of the diagnostic, largely due to the [Ne iii]/[O ii] ratio. However, 33.0% of non-BLAGN land is in the AGN region as well. The [O iii]λ4364/Hγ versus [Ne iii]/[O ii] diagram does not robustly separate BLAGN from non-broad-line galaxies at z > 4. This could be due to star-forming galaxies having harder ionization, or these galaxies contain a narrow line AGN, which are not accounted for. We further inspected galaxies without broad emission lines in each region of [O iii]λ4364/Hγ versus [Ne iii]/[O ii] diagram and found that they have slightly stronger C iii]λ1908 fluxes and equivalent width when landing in the BLAGN region. However, the cause of this higher ionization is unclear and may be revealed by observing UV lines.
Journal Article
Probing the Earliest Phases in the Formation of Massive Galaxies with Simulated HST+JWST Imaging Data from Illustris
2023
We use the Illustris-1 simulation to explore the capabilities of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) data to analyze the stellar populations in high-redshift galaxies, taking advantage of the combined depth, spatial resolution, and wavelength coverage. For that purpose, we use simulated broadband ACS, WFC3, and NIRCam data and two-dimensional stellar population synthesis (2D-SPS) to derive the integrated star formation history (SFH) of massive (M * > 1010 M ⊙) simulated galaxies at 1 < z < 4 that evolve into a local M * > 1011 M ⊙ galaxy. In particular, we explore the potential of HST and JWST data sets reaching a depth similar to those of the CANDELS and ongoing CEERS observations, respectively, and concentrate on determining the capabilities of this data set for characterizing the first episodes in the SFH of local M * > 1011 M ⊙ galaxies by studying their progenitors at z > 1. The 2D-SPS method presented in this paper has been calibrated to robustly recover the cosmic times when the first star formation episodes occurred in massive galaxies, i.e., the first stages in their integrated SFHs. In particular, we discuss the times when the first 1%–50% of their total stellar mass formed in the simulation. We demonstrate that we can recover these ages with typical median systematic offset of less than 5% and scatter around 20%–30%. According to our measurements on Illustris data, we are able to recover that local M * > 1011 M ⊙ galaxies would have started their formation by z = 16, forming the first 5% of their stellar mass present at z ∼ 1 by z = 4.5, 10% by z = 3.7, and 25% by z = 2.7.
Journal Article
Confirmation and refutation of very luminous galaxies in the early Universe
by
Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S.
,
Bagley, Micaela B.
,
Fernández, Vital
in
639/33/34/4120
,
639/33/34/863
,
Abundance
2023
During the first 500 million years of cosmic history, the first stars and galaxies formed, seeding the Universe with heavy elements and eventually reionizing the intergalactic medium
1
–
3
. Observations with the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) have uncovered a surprisingly high abundance of candidates for early star-forming galaxies, with distances (redshifts,
z
), estimated from multiband photometry, as large as
z
≈ 16, far beyond pre-JWST limits
4
–
9
. Although such photometric redshifts are generally robust, they can suffer from degeneracies and occasionally catastrophic errors. Spectroscopic measurements are required to validate these sources and to reliably quantify physical properties that can constrain galaxy formation models and cosmology
10
. Here we present JWST spectroscopy that confirms redshifts for two very luminous galaxies with
z
> 11, and also demonstrates that another candidate with suggested
z
≈ 16 instead has
z
= 4.9, with an unusual combination of nebular line emission and dust reddening that mimics the colours expected for much more distant objects. These results reinforce evidence for the early, rapid formation of remarkably luminous galaxies while also highlighting the necessity of spectroscopic verification. The large abundance of bright, early galaxies may indicate shortcomings in current galaxy formation models or deviations from physical properties (such as the stellar initial mass function) that are generally believed to hold at later times.
JWST spectroscopy confirms redshifts for two very luminous galaxies with
z
> 11, and also demonstrates that another candidate with suggested
z
≈ 16 instead has
z
= 4.9.
Journal Article
Extremely Red Galaxies at z = 5–9 with MIRI and NIRSpec: Dusty Galaxies or Obscured Active Galactic Nuclei?
by
Wilkins, Stephen M
,
Yung, L. Y. Aaron
,
Cleri, Nikko J
in
Active galactic nuclei
,
Continuum radiation
,
Galactic evolution
2024
We study a new population of extremely red objects (EROs) recently discovered by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) based on their NIRCam colors F277W − F444W > 1.5 mag. We find 37 EROs in the Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science Survey (CEERS) field with F444W < 28 mag and photometric redshifts between 5 < z < 7, with median z=6.9−1.6+1.0 . Surprisingly, despite their red long-wavelength colors, these EROs have blue short-wavelength colors (F150W − F200W ∼ 0 mag) indicative of bimodal spectral energy distributions (SEDs) with a red, steep slope in the rest-frame optical, and a blue, flat slope in the rest-frame UV. Moreover, all these EROs are unresolved, point-like sources in all NIRCam bands. We analyze the SEDs of eight of them with MIRI and NIRSpec observations using stellar population models and active galactic nucleus (AGN) templates. We find that dusty galaxies or obscured AGNs provide similarly good SED fits but different stellar properties: massive and dusty, logM⋆/M⊙ ∼ 10 and A V ≳ 3 mag, or low mass and obscured, logM⋆/M⊙ ∼ 7.5 and A V ∼ 0 mag, hosting an obscured quasi-stellar object (QSO). SED modeling does not favor either scenario, but their unresolved sizes are more suggestive of AGNs. If any EROs are confirmed to have logM⋆/M⊙ ≳ 10.5, it would increase the pre-JWST number density at z > 7 by up to a factor ∼60. Similarly, if they are QSOs with luminosities in the L bol > 1045–46 erg s−1 range, their number would exceed that of bright blue QSOs by more than three orders of magnitude. Additional photometry at mid-infrared wavelengths will reveal the true nature of the red continuum emission in these EROs and will place this puzzling population in the right context of galaxy evolution.
Journal Article
JWST NIRSpec Spectroscopy of the Remarkable Bright Galaxy GHZ2/GLASS-z12 at Redshift 12.34
by
Bakx, Tom J. L. C
,
Glazebrook, Karl
,
Filippenko, Alexei V
in
Abundance
,
Active galactic nuclei
,
Emitters
2024
We spectroscopically confirm the M UV = −20.5 mag galaxy GHZ2/GLASS-z12 to be at redshift z = 12.34. The source was selected via NIRCam photometry in GLASS-JWST Early Release Science data, providing the first evidence of a surprising abundance of bright galaxies at z ≳ 10. The NIRSpec PRISM spectrum shows detections of N iv, C iv, He ii, O iii, C iii, O ii, and Ne iii lines and the first detection at high redshift of the O iii Bowen fluorescence line at 3133 Å rest frame. The prominent C iv line with rest-frame equivalent width (EW) ≈ 46 Å puts GHZ2 in the category of extreme C iv emitters. GHZ2 displays UV lines with EWs that are only found in active galactic nuclei (AGNs) or composite objects at low/intermediate redshifts. The UV line-intensity ratios are compatible with both AGNs and star formation in a low-metallicity environment, with the low limit on the [Ne iv]/[N iv] ratio favoring a stellar origin of the ionizing photons. We discuss a possible scenario in which the high ionizing output is due to low-metallicity stars forming in a dense environment. We estimate a metallicity ≲0.1 Z/Z ⊙, a high ionization parameter log U > −2, a N/O abundance 4–5 times the solar value, and a subsolar C/O ratio similar to the recently discovered class of nitrogen-enhanced objects. Considering its abundance patterns and the high stellar mass density (104 M ⊙ pc−2), GHZ2 is an ideal formation site for the progenitors of today's globular clusters. The remarkable brightness of GHZ2 makes it a “Rosetta stone” for understanding the physics of galaxy formation within just 360 Myr after the Big Bang.
Journal Article