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A Census from JWST of Extreme Emission Line Galaxies Spanning the Epoch of Reionization in CEERS

Authors :
Davis, Kelcey
Trump, Jonathan R.
Simons, Raymond C.
Mcgrath, Elizabeth J.
Wilkins, Stephen M.
Haro, Pablo Arrabal
Bagley, Micaela B.
Dickinson, Mark
FernÁndez, Vital
AmorÍn, Ricardo O.
Backhaus, Bren E.
Cleri, Nikko J.
Llerena, Mario
Brunker, Samantha W.
Barro, Guillermo
Bisigello, Laura
Brooks, Madisyn
Costantin, Luca
De La Vega, Alexander
Dekel, Avishai
Finkelstein, Steven L.
Hathi, Nimish P.
Hirschmann, Michaela
Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S.
Koekemoer, Anton M.
Lucas, Ray A.
Papovich, Casey
PÉrez-GonzÁlez, Pablo G.
Pirzkal, Nor
Rodighiero, Giulia
Rose, Caitlin
Yung, L. Y. Aaron
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

We present a sample of 1165 extreme emission-line galaxies (EELGs) at 4<z<9 selected using James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) NIRCam photometry in the Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science (CEERS) program. We use a simple method to photometrically identify EELGs with Hb + [OIII] (combined) or Ha emission of observed-frame equivalent width EW >5000 AA. JWST/NIRSpec spectroscopic observations of a subset (34) of the photometrically selected EELGs validate our selection method: all spectroscopically observed EELGs confirm our photometric identification of extreme emission, including some cases where the SED-derived photometric redshifts are incorrect. We find that the medium-band F410M filter in CEERS is particularly efficient at identifying EELGs, both in terms of including emission lines in the filter and in correctly identifying the continuum between Hb + [OIII] and Ha in the neighboring broad-band filters. We present examples of EELGs that could be incorrectly classified at ultra-high redshift (z>12) as a result of extreme Hb + [OIII] emission blended across the reddest photometric filters. We compare the EELGs to the broader (sub-extreme) galaxy population in the same redshift range and find that they are consistent with being the bluer, high equivalent width tail of a broader population of emission-line galaxies. The highest-EW EELGs tend to have more compact emission-line sizes than continuum sizes, suggesting that active galactic nuclei are responsible for at least some of the most extreme EELGs. Photometrically inferred emission-line ratios are consistent with ISM conditions with high ionization and moderately low metallicity, consistent with previous spectroscopic studies.<br />Comment: 24 pages, 25 figures, submitted to ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2312.07799
Document Type :
Working Paper