EPOCHS IX. When cosmic dawn breaks: Evidence for evolved stellar populations in $7 < z < 12$ galaxies from PEARLS GTO and public NIRCam imaging
James A. A. Trussler, Christopher J. Conselice, Nathan Adams, Duncan, Austin, Leonardo Ferreira, Tom Harvey, Qiong Li, Aswin P. Vijayan, Stephen M., Wilkins, Rogier A. Windhorst, Rachana Bhatawdekar, Cheng Cheng, Dan Coe, Seth, H. Cohen, Simon P. Driver, Brenda Frye

TL;DR
This study uses NIRCam data to identify potential evolved stellar populations in galaxies at redshifts 7-12, providing insights into early star formation and galaxy evolution during cosmic dawn.
Contribution
It presents the first analysis of Balmer-break candidates at high redshift using PEARLS GTO and public NIRCam data, highlighting the complexities in identifying true stellar ages.
Findings
Balmer-break candidates at z~10.5 are older and less star-forming than at z~8.
Strong emission lines and dust can mimic Balmer-break signatures.
Deep spectroscopy and imaging are needed for definitive age determinations.
Abstract
The presence of evolved stars in high-redshift galaxies can place valuable indirect constraints on the onset of star formation in the Universe. Thus we use PEARLS GTO and public NIRCam photometric data to search for Balmer-break candidate galaxies at . We find that our Balmer-break candidates at tend to be older (115 Myr), have lower inferred [O III] + H emission line equivalent widths (120 \r{A}), have lower specific star formation rates (6 Gyr) and redder UV slopes () than our control sample of galaxies. However, these trends all become less strong at , where the F444W filter now probes the strong rest-frame optical emission lines, thus providing additional constraints on the current star formation activity of these galaxies. Indeed, the bursty nature of Epoch of Reionisation galaxies can lead to a disconnect between…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
