Dwarf satellites of high-z Lyman Break Galaxies: a free lunch for JWST

Abstract

We show that the James Webb Space Telescope will be able to detect dwarf satellites of high-z Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs). To this aim, we use cosmological simulations following the evolution of a typical M1010 M LBG up to z6, and analyse the observational properties of its five satellite dwarf galaxies (107 M<M<109 M). Modelling their stellar emission and dust attenuation, we reconstruct their rest-frame UV-optical spectra for 6<z<6.5. JWST/NIRCam synthetic images show that the satellites can be spatially resolved from their host, and their emission is detectable by planned deep surveys. Moreover, we build synthetic spectral energy distributions and colour-magnitude diagrams for the satellites. We conclude that the color F200W-F356W is a powerful diagnostic tool for understanding their physical properties once they have been identified. For example, F200W-F356W~-0.25 can be used to identify star-bursting ( SFR5~M yr-1), low-mass (M5× 108 M) systems, with 80\% of their stars being young and metal-poor ((Z/Z) < -0.5).

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