Very bright, very blue, and very red: JWST CAPERS analysis of highly luminous galaxies with extreme UV slopes at $\mathbf{z = 10}$
Callum T. Donnan, Mark Dickinson, Anthony J. Taylor, Pablo Arrabal Haro, Steven L. Finkelstein, Thomas M. Stanton, Intae Jung, Casey Papovich, Hollis B. Akins, Anton M. Koekemoer, Derek J. McLeod, Lorenzo Napolitano, Ricardo O. Amorín, Ryan Begley, Denis Burgarella, Adam C. Carnall, Caitlin M. Casey, Antonello Calabrò, Fergus Cullen, James S. Dunlop, Richard S. Ellis, Vital Fernández, Mauro Giavalisco, Michaela Hirschmann, Weida Hu, Garth Illingworth, Jeyhan S. Kartaltepe, Dale D. Kocevski, Vasily Kokorev, Ho-Hin Leung, Ray A. Lucas, Alexa M. Morales, Ross McLure, Laura Pentericci, Pablo G. Pérez-González, Rachel S. Somerville, Struan Stevenson, Jonathan R. Trump, L. Y. Aaron Yung, Jorge A. Zavala
公開日: 2025/7/14
Abstract
We present JWST/NIRSpec PRISM observations of three luminous ($M_{\rm UV}<-20$) galaxies at $z\sim10$ 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 $z=9.800\pm0.003$ and $z=9.808\pm0.002$ with UV slopes of $\beta=-2.87\pm0.15$ and $\beta=-2.46\pm0.10$ 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 $z=9.942\pm0.002$ exhibits a red UV slope with $\beta=-1.51\pm0.08$. 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 H$\gamma$ or H$\beta$. Instead, it is most likely that the red UV slope is due to dust-reddening ($A_{\rm V}\simeq0.9$) implying a significant level of dust-obscured star-formation only $\simeq480\, \rm Myr$ after the Big Bang. Under standard assumptions for dust attenuation, EGS-25297 would be the most intrinsically UV-luminous galaxy ($M_{\mathrm{UV,corr}}\simeq -22.4^{+0.7}_{-1.1}$) yet spectroscopically confirmed at $z \sim 10$. This work highlights that luminous galaxies at $z\gtrsim10$ have a diversity of dust properties and that spectroscopy of these galaxies is essential to fully understand star-formation at $z\gtrsim10$.