Constraining Very High Mass Population III Stars through He II Emission in Galaxy BDF-521 at z = 7.01
Zheng Cai, Xiaohui Fan, Linhua Jiang, Romeel Dave, S. Peng Oh, Yujin, Yang, Ann Zabludoff

TL;DR
This study used HST narrowband imaging to search for He II emission in galaxy BDF-521 at z=7.01, constraining the presence and contribution of Population III stars in this early galaxy.
Contribution
First deep narrowband search for He II emission in a z>7 galaxy, setting upper limits on Pop III star formation and their contribution to total star formation.
Findings
No He II emission detected, upper limit on Pop III SFR of ~0.2 M_solar yr^-1.
Pop III stars contribute less than 4% to total star formation.
Galaxy is extremely compact with a half-light radius of 0.6 kpc.
Abstract
Numerous theoretical models have long proposed that a strong He II 1640 emission line is the most prominent and unique feature of massive Population III (Pop III) stars in high redshift galaxies. The He II 1640 line strength can constrain the mass and IMF of Pop III stars. We use F132N narrowband filter on the Hubble Space Telescope's (HST) Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) to look for strong He II lambda 1640 emission in the galaxy BDF-521 at z=7.01, one of the most distant spectroscopically-confirmed galaxies to date. Using deep F132N narrowband imaging, together with our broadband imaging with F125W and F160W filters, we do not detect He II emission from this galaxy, but place a 2-sigma upper limit on the flux of 5.3x10^-19 ergs s^-1 cm^-2. This measurement corresponds to a 2-sigma upper limit on the Pop III star formation rate (SFR_PopIII) of ~ 0.2 M_solar yr^-1, assuming a Salpeter IMF…
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