Astro2020 Science White Paper: Exploration and characterization of the earliest epoch of galaxy formation: beyond the re-ionization era
Abstract
State-of-the-art rest-frame UV and FIR photometric and spectroscopic observations are now pushing the redshift frontiers of galaxy formation studies up to z9-11 and beyond. Recent HST observations unveiled the presence of a star-forming galaxy exhibiting the Lyman break at λ obs=1.470.01 μm, i.e., a z=11.09+0.08-0.12 galaxy with a stellar mass of 109 M, demonstrating that galaxy build-up was well underway early in the epoch of reionization (EoR) at z>10. Targeted spectroscopy of a lensed Lyman break galaxy uncovers the earliest metals known to date up to z=9.10960.0006 by detecting the bright [OIII] 88~μm nebular line, indicating the onset of star formation 250 million years after the Big Bang, i.e., corresponding to a redshift of z15. These latest findings lead us to a number of key questions: How and when metal enrichment happened in the EoR? What was the nature of the earliest-epoch star-forming galaxies at z=10-15? What was the spatial distribution of such galaxies, and what was the relation to the putative large-scale ionization bubbles during the EoR? What were the dark-halo masses of such earliest-epoch star-forming galaxies? To address all these questions, we need to uncover a statistically large number of z=10-15 galaxies in the pre-reionization era. Here we argue two possible pathways: (1) a wide-area, sensitive blind spectroscopic survey of [OIII] 88 μm line-emitting galaxies at submillimeter wavelengths, and (2) an ultra-wide-area, high-cadence photometric survey of transient sources at radio-to-(sub)millimeter wavelengths, together with the immediate follow-up spectroscopy with an ultra-wide-band spectrograph, to catch the pop-III γ-ray bursts.