A Candidate $z\sim10$ Galaxy Strongly Lensed into a Spatially Resolved Arc
Brett Salmon, Dan Coe, Larry Bradley, Marusa Brada\v{c}, Kuang-Han, Huang, Victoria Strait, Pascal Oesch, Rachel Paterno-Mahler, Adi Zitrin, Ana, Acebron, Nath\'alia Cibirka, Shotaro Kikuchihara, Masamune Oguri, Gabriel B., Brammer, Keren Sharon, Michele Trenti, Roberto J. Avila

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a strongly lensed galaxy candidate at z~10, spatially resolved into an arc, providing a rare opportunity to study galaxy properties shortly after the Big Bang.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed analysis of a z~10 galaxy strongly lensed into a spatially resolved arc, including lens modeling and physical property estimation.
Findings
Galaxy candidate at z~10 strongly lensed into a 2.5" arc
Estimated stellar mass of about 5×10^9 solar masses
Star formation rate around 20 solar masses per year
Abstract
The most distant galaxies known are at z~10-11, observed 400-500 Myr after the Big Bang. The few z~10-11 candidates discovered to date have been exceptionally small- barely resolved, if at all, by the Hubble Space Telescope. Here we present the discovery of SPT0615-JD, a fortuitous z~10 (z_phot=9.9+/-0.6) galaxy candidate stretched into an arc over ~2.5" by the effects of strong gravitational lensing. Discovered in the Reionization Lensing Cluster Survey (RELICS) Hubble Treasury program and companion S-RELICS Spitzer program, this candidate has a lensed H-band magnitude of 25.7+/-0.1 AB mag. With a magnification of \mu~4-7 estimated from our lens models, the de-lensed intrinsic magnitude is 27.6+/-0.3 AB mag, and the half-light radius is r_e<0.8 kpc, both consistent with other z>9 candidates. The inferred stellar mass (log [M* /M_Sun]=9.7^{+0.7}_{-0.5}) and star formation rate (\log…
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