Massive Star cluster formation under the microscope at z=6
E. Vanzella, F. Calura, M. Meneghetti, M. Castellano, G.B. Caminha, A., Mercurio, G. Cupani, P. Rosati, C. Grillo, R. Gilli, M. Mignoli, G., Fiorentino, C. Arcidiacono, M. Lombini, F. Cortecchia

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of an extremely dense, young star-forming region at redshift 6, potentially hosting a super star cluster, providing insights into early star cluster formation and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed observation of a superdense star-forming region at z=6, with implications for globular cluster formation theories.
Findings
Detected a star-forming region with ~1000 Msun/yr/kpc^2 at z=6
Identified a potential young massive star cluster within the region
Future high-resolution imaging will resolve structures down to 2-8 pc
Abstract
We report on a superdense star-forming region with an effective radius (R_e) smaller than 13 pc identified at z=6.143 and showing a star-formation rate density \Sigma_SFR~1000 Msun/yr/kpc2 (or conservatively >300 Msun/yr/kpc2). Such a dense region is detected with S/N>40 hosted by a dwarf extending over 440 pc, dubbed D1 (Vanzella et al. 2017b). D1 is magnified by a factor 17.4+/-5.0 behind the Hubble Frontier Field galaxy cluster MACS~J0416 and elongated tangentially by a factor 13.2+/-4.0 (including the systematic errors). The lens model accurately reproduces the positions of the confirmed multiple images with a r.m.s. of 0.35", and the tangential stretch is well depicted by a giant multiply-imaged Lya arc. D1 is part of an interacting star-forming complex extending over 800 pc. The SED-fitting, the very blue ultraviolet slope (\beta ~ -2.5, F(\lambda) ~ \lambda^\beta) and the…
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