The Most Luminous z~9-10 Galaxy Candidates yet Found: The Luminosity Function, Cosmic Star-Formation Rate, and the First Mass Density Estimate at 500 Myr
P. A. Oesch (UCSC), R. J. Bouwens (Leiden), G. D. Illingworth (UCSC),, I. Labbe (Leiden), R. Smit (Leiden), P. G. van Dokkum (Yale), I. Momcheva, (Yale), M. L. N. Ashby (Harvard), G. G. Fazio (Harvard), J. Huang (Harvard),, S. P. Willner (Harvard), V. Gonzalez (UCR)

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of four bright galaxy candidates at redshifts around 9-10, providing new insights into early galaxy luminosity functions, star formation rates, and mass densities within 500 million years after the Big Bang.
Contribution
It presents the first detection of such luminous galaxies at z~9-10, doubling the known candidates and offering new constraints on early galaxy evolution and cosmic star formation.
Findings
Discovery of four bright z~9-10 galaxy candidates.
Evidence of significant evolution in the galaxy luminosity function at high redshift.
Estimation of stellar masses and cosmic stellar mass density at z~10.
Abstract
[abridged] We present the discovery of four surprisingly bright (H_160 ~ 26 - 27 mag AB) galaxy candidates at z~9-10 in the complete HST CANDELS WFC3/IR GOODS-N imaging data, doubling the number of z~10 galaxy candidates that are known, just ~500 Myr after the Big Bang. Two similarly bright sources are also detected in a systematic re-analysis of the GOODS-S data set. Three of the four galaxies in GOODS-N are significantly detected at 4.5-6.2sigma in the very deep Spitzer/IRAC 4.5 micron data, as is one of the GOODS-S candidates. Furthermore, the brightest of our candidates (at z=10.2+-0.4) is robustly detected also at 3.6 micron (6.9sigma), revealing a flat UV spectral energy distribution with a slope beta=-2.0+-0.2, consistent with demonstrated trends with luminosity at high redshift. The abundance of such luminous candidates suggests that the luminosity function evolves more…
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