Star Formation under a Cosmic Microscope: Highly magnified z = 11 galaxy behind the Bullet Cluster

Abstract

We present measurements of stellar population properties of a newly discovered spectroscopically confirmed z=11.10+0.11-0.26, gravitationally lensed galaxy, using JWST NIRSpec PRISM spectroscopy and NIRCam imaging. The arc is highly magnified by the Bullet Cluster (magnification factor μ=14.0+6.2-0.3. It contains three star-forming components of which one is barely resolved and two are unresolved, giving intrinsic sizes of 10pc. The clumps also contain ~50% of the total stellar mass. The galaxy formed the majority of its stars ~150Myr ago (by z~14). The spectrum shows a pronounced damping wing, typical for galaxies deep in the reionisation era and indicating a neutral IGM at this line of sight. The intrinsic luminosity of the galaxy is 0.086+0.008-0.030 L* (with L* being the characteristic luminosity for this redshift), making it the lowest luminosity spectroscopically confirmed galaxy at z>10 discovered to date.

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