Very bright, very blue, and very red: JWST CAPERS analysis of highly luminous galaxies with extreme UV slopes at z = 10

Abstract

We present JWST/NIRSpec PRISM observations of three luminous (M UV<-20) galaxies at z10 observed with the CAPERS Cycle 3 program. These galaxies exhibit extreme UV slopes compared to typical galaxies at z=10. Of the three sources, two of them are a close pair (0.22 - arcsec) of blue galaxies at z=9.8000.003 and z=9.8080.002 with UV slopes of β=-2.870.15 and β=-2.460.10 respectively, selected from PRIMER COSMOS NIRCam imaging. We perform spectrophotometric modeling of the galaxies which suggests extremely young stellar ages and a lack of dust attenuation. For the bluest galaxy, its UV slope also suggests significant Lyman continuum escape. In contrast, the third source (selected from CEERS NIRCam imaging) at z=9.9420.002 exhibits a red UV slope with β=-1.510.08. We rule out the possibility of a strong nebular continuum due to the lack of a Balmer jump and find no evidence to support the presence of active galactic nucleus continuum due to a lack of strong UV emission lines and no broad component to Hγ or Hβ. Instead, it is most likely that the red UV slope is due to dust-reddening (A V0.9) implying a significant level of dust-obscured star-formation only 480\, Myr after the Big Bang. Under standard assumptions for dust attenuation, EGS-25297 would be the most intrinsically UV-luminous galaxy (MUV,corr -22.4+0.7-1.1) yet spectroscopically confirmed at z 10. This work highlights that luminous galaxies at z10 have a diversity of dust properties and that spectroscopy of these galaxies is essential to fully understand star-formation at z10.

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