JADES NIRSpec Spectroscopy of GN-z11: Lyman-α emission and possible enhanced nitrogen abundance in a z=10.60 luminous galaxy

Abstract

We present JADES JWST/NIRSpec spectroscopy of GN-z11, the most luminous candidate z>10 Lyman break galaxy in the GOODS-North field with MUV=-21.5. We derive a redshift of z=10.603 (lower than previous determinations) based on multiple emission lines in our low and medium resolution spectra over 0.8-5.3 μm. We significantly detect the continuum and measure a blue rest-UV spectral slope of β=-2.4. Remarkably, we see spatially-extended Lyman-α in emission (despite the highly-neutral IGM expected at this early epoch), offset 555 km s-1 redward of the systemic redshift. From our measurements of collisionally-excited lines of both low- and high-ionization (including [O II]λ3727, [Ne III]λ 3869 and C III]λ1909) we infer a high ionization parameter ( U -2). We detect the rarely-seen N IV]λ1486 and N III]λ1748 lines in both our low and medium resolution spectra, with other high ionization lines seen in the low resolution spectrum such as He II (blended with O III]) and C IV (with a possible P-Cygni profile). Based on the observed rest-UV line ratios, we cannot conclusively rule out photoionization from AGN, although the high C III]/He II and N III]/He II ratios are compatible with a star-formation explanation. If the observed emission lines are powered by star formation, then the strong N III]λ1748 observed may imply an unusually high N/O abundance. Balmer emission lines (Hγ, Hδ) are also detected, and if powered by star formation rather than an AGN we infer a star formation rate of 20-30 M yr-1 (depending on the IMF) and low dust attenuation. Our NIRSpec spectroscopy confirms that GN-z11 is a remarkable galaxy with extreme properties seen 430 Myr after the Big Bang.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…