Unveiling the Cosmic Gems Arc at z10 with JWST NIRCam
Abstract
We present recent JWST NIRCam imaging observations of SPT0615-JD (also known as the Cosmic Gems Arc), lensed by the galaxy cluster SPT-CL J0615-5746. The 5 arcsec long arc is the most highly magnified z>10 galaxy known. It straddles the lensing critical curve and reveals five star clusters with radii of 1 pc or less. We measure the full arc to have F200W 24.5 AB mag, consisting of two mirror images, each 25.3 AB mag with a median magnification of μ 60+17-8 (delensed 29.7 AB mag, MUV = -17.8). The galaxy has an extremely strong Lyman break F115W-F200W >3.2 mag (2σ lower limit), is undetected in all bluer filters (< 2σ), and has a very blue continuum slope redward of the break (β = -2.7 0.1). This results in a photometric redshift zphot = 10.2 0.2 (95% confidence) with no significant likelihood below z<9.8. Based on spectral energy distribution fitting to the total photometry, we estimate an intrinsic stellar mass of M* 2.4 - 5.6 × 107 M, young mass-weighted age of 21 - 79 Myr, low dust content (AV < 0.15), and a low metallicity of 1\%~Z. We identify a fainter third counterimage candidate within 2.2 arcsec of the predicted position, lensed to AB mag 28.4 and magnified by μ 2, suggesting the fold arc may only show 60% of the galaxy. SPT0615-JD is a unique laboratory to study star clusters observed within a galaxy just 460 Myr after the Big Bang.
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