Discovery of a Very Bright Strongly-Lensed Galaxy Candidate at z ~ 7.6
L. D. Bradley, R. J. Bouwens, H. C. Ford, G. D. Illingworth, M. J., Jee, N. Benitez, T. J. Broadhurst, M. Franx, B. L. Frye, L. Infante, V., Motta, P. Rosati, R. L. White, W. Zheng

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a very bright, strongly-lensed galaxy candidate at redshift approximately 7.6, using HST and Spitzer data, providing insights into early galaxy formation and properties.
Contribution
The paper presents the first highly reliable, bright z>7 galaxy candidate with detailed lensing, photometry, and stellar population analysis, expanding the known sample of early universe galaxies.
Findings
Brightest observed z>7 galaxy candidate to date.
Galaxy has stellar mass of 1.6-3.9 x 10^9 M_sun.
Star formation occurring in compact knots <300 pc.
Abstract
Using HST and Spitzer IRAC imaging, we report the discovery of a very bright strongly lensed Lyman break galaxy (LBG) candidate at z~7.6 in the field of the massive galaxy cluster Abell 1689. The galaxy candidate, which we refer to as A1689-zD1, shows a strong z-J break of at least 2.2 mag and is completely undetected (<1 sigma) in HST/ACS g, r, i, and z-band data. These properties, combined with the very blue J-H and H-[4.5] colors, are exactly the properties of an z~7.6 LBG and can only be reasonably fit by a star-forming galaxy at z=7.6 +/- 0.4. Attempts to reproduce these properties with a model galaxy at z<4 yield particularly poor fits. A1689-zD1 has an observed (lensed) magnitude of 24.7 AB (8 sigma) in the NICMOS H band and is ~1.3 mag brighter than the brightest-known z-dropout galaxy. When corrected for the cluster magnification of 9.3 at z~7.6, the candidate has an intrinsic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
