A strong He II $\lambda$1640 emitter with extremely blue UV spectral slope at $z=8.16$: presence of Pop III stars?
Xin Wang, Cheng Cheng, Junqiang Ge, Xiao-Lei Meng, Emanuele Daddi,, Haojing Yan, Zhiyuan Ji, Yifei Jin, Tucker Jones, Matthew A. Malkan, Pablo, Arrabal Haro, Gabriel Brammer, Masamune Oguri, Meicun Hou, Shiwu Zhang

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a high-redshift galaxy at z=8.16 with extremely blue UV spectral slope and strong He II emission, suggesting the possible presence of Pop III stars contributing to cosmic reionization.
Contribution
It provides the first robust evidence of a galaxy at z>8 with spectral features indicative of Pop III stellar populations, supported by detailed photoionization modeling.
Findings
Detection of a galaxy at z=8.16 with steep UV slope of -2.53
Strong He II λ1640 emission line with high equivalent width
Evidence supporting coexistence of Pop III and metal-enriched stars
Abstract
Cosmic hydrogen reionization and cosmic production of first metals are major phase transitions of the universe occurring during the first billion years after the Big Bang, however these are still underexplored observationally. Using the JWST NIRSpec prism spectroscopy, we report the discovery of a sub- galaxy at , dubbed RXJ2129-z8HeII, via the detection of a series of strong rest-frame UV/optical nebular emission lines and the clear Lyman break. RXJ2129-z8HeII shows a pronounced UV continuum with an extremely steep (i.e. blue) spectral slope of , the steepest amongst all spectroscopically confirmed galaxies at , in support of its very hard ionizing spectrum that could lead to a significant leakage of its ionizing flux. Therefore, RXJ2129-z8HeII is representative of the key galaxy population driving…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
