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Earliest Galaxies in the JADES Origins Field: Luminosity Function and Cosmic Star Formation Rate Density 300 Myr after the Big Bang

Authors :
Brant Robertson
Benjamin D. Johnson
Sandro Tacchella
Daniel J. Eisenstein
Kevin Hainline
Santiago Arribas
William M. Baker
Andrew J. Bunker
Stefano Carniani
Phillip A. Cargile
Courtney Carreira
Stephane Charlot
Jacopo Chevallard
Mirko Curti
Emma Curtis-Lake
Francesco D’Eugenio
Eiichi Egami
Ryan Hausen
Jakob M. Helton
Peter Jakobsen
Zhiyuan Ji
Gareth C. Jones
Roberto Maiolino
Michael V. Maseda
Erica Nelson
Pablo G. Pérez-González
Dávid Puskás
Marcia Rieke
Renske Smit
Fengwu Sun
Hannah Übler
Lily Whitler
Christina C. Williams
Christopher N. A. Willmer
Chris Willott
Joris Witstok
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal, Vol 970, Iss 1, p 31 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2024.

Abstract

We characterize the earliest galaxy population in the JADES Origins Field, the deepest imaging field observed with JWST. We make use of ancillary Hubble Space Telescope optical images (five filters spanning 0.4–0.9 μ m) and novel JWST images with 14 filters spanning 0.8−5 μ m, including seven medium-band filters, and reaching total exposure times of up to 46 hr per filter. We combine all our data at >2.3 μ m to construct an ultradeep image, reaching as deep as ≈31.4 AB mag in the stack and 30.3–31.0 AB mag (5 σ , r = 0.″1 circular aperture) in individual filters. We measure photometric redshifts and use robust selection criteria to identify a sample of eight galaxy candidates at redshifts z = 11.5−15. These objects show compact half-light radii of R _1/2 ∼ 50−200 pc, stellar masses of M _⋆ ∼ 10 ^7 −10 ^8 M _☉ , and star formation rates ∼ 0.1−1 M _☉ yr ^−1 . Our search finds no candidates at 15 < z < 20, placing upper limits at these redshifts. We develop a forward-modeling approach to infer the properties of the evolving luminosity function without binning in redshift or luminosity that marginalizes over the photometric redshift uncertainty of our candidate galaxies and incorporates the impact of nondetections. We find a z = 12 luminosity function in good agreement with prior results, and that the luminosity function normalization and UV luminosity density decline by a factor of ∼2.5 from z = 12 to z = 14. We discuss the possible implications of our results in the context of theoretical models for evolution of the dark matter halo mass function.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15384357
Volume :
970
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.b50b5903eb284ed180820181fa7cc563
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad463d