Finding Peas in the Early Universe with JWST

  • Rhoads J
  • Wold I
  • Harish S
  • et al.
52Citations
Citations of this article
33Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

The Early Release Observations (EROs) of JWST beautifully demonstrate the promise of JWST in characterizing the universe at Cosmic Dawn. We analyze the Near Infrared Spectrograph ERO spectra of three z ∼ 8 galaxies to determine their metallicities, gas temperatures, and ionization. These galaxies offer the first opportunity to understand the physical properties of Epoch-of-Reionization galaxies through detailed rest-optical emission-line spectroscopy. We show that these objects have metal abundances 12 + log [ O / H ] ≈ 6.9–8.3, based on both the T e method and on a recent calibration of the R 23 metallicity indicator. Since the spectra are some of the earliest science data from JWST, we compare several line ratios with values expected from robust physics, to validate our measurement procedures. We compare the abundances and emission-line ratios to a nearby sample of Green Pea galaxies—a population of nearby emission-line galaxies whose UV properties resemble Epoch-of-Reionization galaxies, and which often have large Lyman continuum escape fractions. The JWST data show striking further similarities between these high-redshift galaxies and nearby Green Peas. The z ∼ 8 galaxies span the metallicity range covered by Green Peas. They also show the compact morphology that is typical of emission-line-dominated galaxies at all redshifts. Based on these similarities with Green Peas, it is likely that these are the first rest-optical spectra of galaxies that are actively driving cosmological reionization.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Rhoads, J. E., Wold, I. G. B., Harish, S., Kim, K. J., Pharo, J., Malhotra, S., … Yang, H. (2023). Finding Peas in the Early Universe with JWST. The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 942(1), L14. https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/acaaaf

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free