Resolving stellar populations, star formation, and ISM conditions with JWST in a large spiral galaxy at z 2

Abstract

Cosmic noon represents the prime epoch of galaxy assembly, and a sweet spot for observations with the James Webb Telescope (JWST) and ground-based near-IR integral-field unit (IFU) spectrographs. This work analyses JWST NIRSpec Micro Shutter Array (MSA), NIRCam Wide Field Slitless Spectroscopy (WFSS) of K20-ID7, a large spiral, star-forming (SF) galaxy at z=2.2, with evidence for radial gas inflows. By exploiting the synergy with ground-based IFU ERIS observations, we conduct a comprehensive and resolved study of the interstellar medium (ISM) and stellar properties, from rest optical to near-IR, via emission-line diagnostics, resolved spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting of high-resolution imaging, and Paβ line detection in NIRCam WFSS data. Our analysis reveals massive (M(0.67-3.5)×109 M) SF clumps with star formation rates (SFRs) ~3-24 M/yr, and quite low dust attenuation (AV0.4), electron density (ne<300 cm-3), and ionisation (log(U) -3.0). The central bulge turns out to be modestly massive (M=(73)×109 M), heavily obscured (AV=6.430.55), and likely to have formed most of its stellar mass in the past (SFR=8242 M/yr over the last 100 Myr), yet still forming stars at a lower rate (SFR=128 M/yr over the last 10 Myr). We infer a metallicity 12+log(O/H)~8.54 and an apparent enhancement of the N/O abundance (log(N/O) -1.0) in all distinct galaxy regions, a likely consequence of dilution effects due to radial inflows of metal-poor gas. We measure a sub-solar sulfur abundance (log(S/O)-1.9). Finally, the radial stellar age profile reveals older stellar populations in the inner galaxy regions compared to the outskirts, pointing to an inside-out growth of K20-ID7.

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