On the ages of bright galaxies 500 Myr after the Big Bang: insights into star formation activity at z 15 with JWST

Abstract

With JWST, new opportunities to study the evolution of galaxies in the early Universe are emerging. Spitzer constraints on rest-optical properties of z7 galaxies demonstrated the power of using galaxy stellar masses and star formation histories (SFHs) to indirectly infer the cosmic star formation history. However, only the brightest individual z8 objects could be detected with Spitzer, making it difficult to robustly constrain activity at z10. Here, we leverage the greatly improved rest-optical sensitivity of JWST at z8 to constrain the ages of seven UV-bright (MUV-19.5) galaxies selected to lie at z8.5-11, then investigate implications for z15 star formation. We infer the properties of individual objects with two spectral energy distribution modelling codes, then infer a distribution of ages for bright z8.5-11 galaxies. We find a median age of 20 Myr, younger than that inferred at z7 with a similar analysis, consistent with an evolution towards larger specific star formation rates at early times. The age distribution suggests that only 3 percent of bright z8.5-11 galaxies would be similarly luminous at z15, implying that the number density of bright galaxies declines by at least an order of magnitude between z8.5-11 and z15. This evolution is challenging to reconcile with some early JWST results suggesting the abundance of bright galaxies does not significantly decrease towards very early times, but we suggest this tension may be eased if young stellar populations form on top of older stellar components, or if bright z15 galaxies are observed during a burst of star formation.

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