Evidence for Ubiquitous, High-EW Nebular Emission in z~7 Galaxies: Towards a Clean Measurement of the Specific Star Formation Rate using a Sample of Bright, Magnified Galaxies
R. Smit, R. J. Bouwens, I. Labbe, W. Zheng, L. Bradley, M. Donahue, D., Lemze, J. Moustakas, K. Umetsu, A. Zitrin, D. Coe, M. Postman, V. Gonzalez,, M. Bartelmann, N. Benitez, T. Broadhurst, H. Ford, C. Grillo, L. Infante, Y., Jimenez-Teja, S. Jouvel, D.D. Kelson, O. Lahav

TL;DR
This study provides direct evidence of ubiquitous high-EW nebular emission in z~7 galaxies, enabling more accurate measurements of their specific star formation rates by selecting bright, magnified galaxies in a specific redshift window.
Contribution
It introduces a novel observational strategy to measure nebular emission and sSFR in z~7 galaxies using IRAC fluxes, overcoming previous uncertainties.
Findings
Detected high-EW [OIII]+Hbeta emission in z~7 galaxies.
Blue IRAC colors indicate extreme nebular line emission.
Set a lower limit of >~4 Gyr^-1 on sSFR for these galaxies.
Abstract
Growing observational evidence now indicates that nebular line emission has a significant impact on the rest-frame optical fluxes of z~5-7 galaxies observed with Spitzer. This line emission makes z~5-7 galaxies appear more massive, with lower specific star formation rates. However, corrections for this line emission have been very difficult to perform reliably due to huge uncertainties on the overall strength of such emission at z>~5.5. Here, we present the most direct observational evidence yet for ubiquitous high-EW [OIII]+Hbeta line emission in Lyman-break galaxies at z~7, while also presenting a strategy for an improved measurement of the sSFR at z~7. We accomplish this through the selection of bright galaxies in the narrow redshift window z~6.6-7.0 where the IRAC 4.5 micron flux provides a clean measurement of the stellar continuum light. Observed 4.5 micron fluxes in this window…
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