The UV continua and inferred stellar populations of galaxies at z ~ 7 - 9 revealed by the Hubble Ultra Deep Field 2012 campaign
J. S. Dunlop, A. B. Rogers, R. J. McLure, R. S. Ellis, B. E., Robertson, A. Koekemoer, P. Dayal, E. Curtis-Lake, V. Wild, S. Charlot, R. A., A. Bowler, M. A. Schenker, M. Ouchi, Y. Ono, M. Cirasuolo, S. R. Furlanetto,, D. P. Stark, T. A. Targett, E. Schneider

TL;DR
This study uses ultra-deep Hubble imaging to measure the UV spectral slope of faint galaxies at redshifts 7 to 9, revealing their star-forming properties and metallicity, with implications for early galaxy evolution.
Contribution
First unbiased measurement of UV spectral slope beta for faint galaxies at z ~ 7-9, providing new insights into their stellar populations and dust content.
Findings
Beta ~ -2.1 at z ~ 7 for faint galaxies
Beta ~ -1.9 at z ~ 8, similar to z ~ 7
No significant scatter in beta at z ~ 7
Abstract
We use the new ultra-deep, near-infrared imaging of the Hubble Ultra-Deep Field (HUDF) provided by our UDF12 HST WFC3/IR campaign to explore the rest-frame UV properties of galaxies at redshifts z > 6.5. We present the first unbiased measurement of the average UV power-law index, beta, for faint galaxies at z ~ 7, the first meaningful measurements of beta at z ~ 8, and tentative estimates for a new sample of galaxies at z ~ 9. Utilising galaxy selection in the new F140W imaging to minimize colour bias, and applying both colour and power-law estimators of beta, we find beta = -2.1 (+/-0.2) at z ~ 7 for galaxies with M_UV ~ -18. This means that the faintest galaxies uncovered at this epoch have, on average, UV colours no more extreme than those displayed by the bluest star-forming galaxies at low redshift. At z ~ 8 we find a similar value, beta = -1.9 (+/-0.3). At z ~ 9, we find beta =…
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