HST Grism Observations of a Gravitationally Lensed Redshift 10 Galaxy
Austin Hoag, Maru\v{s}a Brada\v{c}, Gabriel B. Brammer, Kuang-Han, Huang, Tommaso Treu, Charlotte A. Mason, Marco Castellano, Marcella Di, Criscienzo, Tucker Jones, Patrick Kelly, Laura Pentericci, Russell Ryan,, Kasper B. Schmidt, Michele Trenti

TL;DR
This paper reports deep HST grism spectroscopic observations of a galaxy at redshift 9.5, confirming its distance, analyzing its stellar population, and discussing implications for the ionization state of the early universe.
Contribution
First spectroscopic confirmation of a galaxy at z~9.5 using HST grism data, with detailed analysis of its stellar population and ionization state.
Findings
Redshift of the galaxy is confirmed at z=9.53.
Lyman-alpha emission is not detected above 21 Å, indicating a highly neutral IGM.
The galaxy hosts a stellar population approximately 340 million years old.
Abstract
We present deep spectroscopic observations of a Lyman-break galaxy candidate (hereafter MACS1149-JD) at with the Space Telescope () WFC3/IR grisms. The grism observations were taken at 4 distinct position angles, totaling 34 orbits with the G141 grism, although only 19 of the orbits are relatively uncontaminated along the trace of MACS1149-JD. We fit a 3-parameter (, F160W mag, and Ly equivalent width) Lyman-break galaxy template to the three least contaminated grism position angles using an MCMC approach. The grism data alone are best fit with a redshift of ( confidence), in good agreement with our photometric estimate of ( confidence). Our analysis rules out Lyman-alpha emission from MACS1149-JD above a equivalent width of 21…
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