The spectral evolution of the first galaxies. I. James Webb Space Telescope detection limits and color criteria for population III galaxies
E. Zackrisson, C.-E. Rydberg, D. Schaerer, G. Ostlin, M. Tuli

TL;DR
This paper introduces Yggdrasil, a spectral synthesis model to predict JWST detection limits for population III galaxies, and explores color criteria for their identification and IMF probing at high redshift.
Contribution
The study develops a new spectral synthesis code, Yggdrasil, and assesses JWST's capabilities to detect and distinguish population III galaxies using color criteria and detection limits.
Findings
JWST can detect population III galaxies with stellar masses around 10^5 Msolar at z=10.
Color criteria can help identify candidate population III galaxies for follow-up spectroscopy.
Colors dominated by nebular emission are insensitive to the stellar initial mass function.
Abstract
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is expected to revolutionize our understanding of the high-redshift Universe, and may be able to test the prediction that the first, chemically pristine (population III) stars formed with very high characteristic masses. Since isolated population III stars are likely to be beyond the reach of JWST, small population III galaxies may offer the best prospects of directly probing the properties of metal-free stars. Here, we present Yggdrasil, a new spectral synthesis code geared towards the first galaxies. Using this model, we explore the JWST imaging detection limits for population III galaxies and investigate to what extent such objects may be identified based on their JWST colours. We predict that JWST should be able to detect population III galaxies with stellar population masses as low as ~10^5 Msolar at z=10 in ultra deep exposures. Over limited…
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