A highly magnified candidate for a young galaxy seen when the Universe was 500 Myrs old
Wei Zheng, Marc Postman, Adi Zitrin, John Moustakas, Xinwen Shu,, Stephanie Jouvel, Ole Host, Alberto Molino, Larry Bradley, Dan Coe, Leonidas, A. Moustakas, Mauricio Carrasco, Holland Ford, Narciso Ben{\i}tez, Tod R., Lauer, Stella Seitz, Rychard Bouwens, Anton Koekemoer

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a highly magnified galaxy candidate at redshift 9.6, observed through gravitational lensing, providing insights into galaxy formation less than 500 million years after the Big Bang.
Contribution
It presents the first highly magnified z>9 galaxy candidate suitable for detailed spectroscopic analysis, leveraging gravitational lensing in galaxy cluster fields.
Findings
Photometric redshift of z=9.6±0.2 with high accuracy
Magnification factor of approximately 15 by gravitational lensing
Estimated stellar mass, star-formation rate, and age of the galaxy
Abstract
The early Universe at redshift z\sim6-11 marks the reionization of the intergalactic medium, following the formation of the first generation of stars. However, those young galaxies at a cosmic age of \lesssim 500 million years (Myr, at z \gtrsim 10) remain largely unexplored as they are at or beyond the sensitivity limits of current large telescopes. Gravitational lensing by galaxy clusters enables the detection of high-redshift galaxies that are fainter than what otherwise could be found in the deepest images of the sky. We report the discovery of an object found in the multi-band observations of the cluster MACS1149+22 that has a high probability of being a gravitationally magnified object from the early universe. The object is firmly detected (12 sigma) in the two reddest bands of HST/WFC3, and not detected below 1.2 {\mu}m, matching the characteristics of z\sim9 objects. We derive a…
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