# Spectroscopic confirmation of an ultra-faint galaxy at the epoch of   reionization

**Authors:** Austin Hoag, Maru\v{s}a Brada\v{c}, Michele Trenti, Tommaso Treu,, Kasper B. Schmidt, Kuang-Han Huang, Brian C. Lemaux, Julie He, Stephanie R., Bernard, Louis E. Abramson, Charlotte A. Mason, Takahiro Morishita, Laura, Pentericci, Tim Schrabback

arXiv: 1704.02970 · 2017-04-11

## TL;DR

This paper reports the spectroscopic confirmation of a faint, low-luminosity galaxy at redshift 7.64, providing evidence that such galaxies could have significantly contributed to cosmic reionization.

## Contribution

It presents the first unambiguous spectroscopic detection of a faint galaxy at z>7.5, expanding understanding of the sources responsible for reionization.

## Key findings

- Detected Lyman-alpha emission at z=7.64
- Galaxy is gravitationally magnified, intrinsically faint
- Most distant confirmed galaxy at reionization epoch

## Abstract

Within one billion years of the Big Bang, intergalactic hydrogen was ionized by sources emitting ultraviolet and higher energy photons. This was the final phenomenon to globally affect all the baryons (visible matter) in the Universe. It is referred to as cosmic reionization and is an integral component of cosmology. It is broadly expected that intrinsically faint galaxies were the primary ionizing sources due to their abundance in this epoch. However, at the highest redshifts ($z>7.5$; lookback time 13.1 Gyr), all galaxies with spectroscopic confirmations to date are intrinsically bright and, therefore, not necessarily representative of the general population. Here, we report the unequivocal spectroscopic detection of a low luminosity galaxy at $z>7.5$. We detected the Lyman-$\alpha$ emission line at $\sim 10504$ {\AA} in two separate observations with MOSFIRE on the Keck I Telescope and independently with the Hubble Space Telescope's slit-less grism spectrograph, implying a source redshift of $z = 7.640 \pm 0.001$. The galaxy is gravitationally magnified by the massive galaxy cluster MACS J1423.8+2404 ($z = 0.545$), with an estimated intrinsic luminosity of $M_{AB} = -19.6 \pm 0.2$ mag and a stellar mass of $M_{\star} = 3.0^{+1.5}_{-0.8} \times 10^8$ solar masses. Both are an order of magnitude lower than the four other Lyman-$\alpha$ emitters currently known at $z > 7.5$, making it probably the most distant representative source of reionization found to date.

## Full text

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## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.02970/full.md

## References

41 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.02970/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.02970