Pristine Massive Star Formation Caught at the Break of Cosmic Dawn
Abstract
The existence of galaxies with no heavy elements is a key prediction of cosmological models. So far no "zero-metallicity", or Population~III, galaxies have been identified. Here, we report the identification of an extremely metal-poor galaxy AMORE6 at redshift z=5.7253, multiply imaged by a foreground galaxy cluster. JWST spectra consistently detect Hβ at both positions, but [OIII]λλ4960,5008 remains undetected. This places a firm upper limit on its oxygen abundance, <0.19% of solar metallicity at 3σ, establishing itself as the most pristine galaxy by far. AMORE6 exhibits exceptional properties that indicate the presence of pristine massive star formation. Finding such an example at a relatively late cosmic time is surprising, but it also validates the basic ideas behind the Big Bang model.
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