REBELS-25: Discovery of a dynamically cold disc galaxy at z = 7.31
Lucie E. Rowland, Jacqueline Hodge, Rychard Bouwens, Pavel Mancera, Pi\~na, Alexander Hygate, Hiddo Algera, Manuel Aravena, Rebecca Bowler,, Elisabete da Cunha, Pratika Dayal, Andrea Ferrara, Thomas Herard-Demanche,, Hanae Inami, Ivana van Leeuwen, Ilse de Looze, Pascal Oesch

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of a dynamically cold, rotating disc galaxy at redshift 7.31, demonstrating early formation of stable disc structures in the universe's first billion years.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution kinematic and morphological analysis of a galaxy at z=7.31, showing the existence of cold, rotationally supported discs in the early universe, challenging previous galaxy formation models.
Findings
REBELS-25 is a massive, star-forming galaxy with a cold, rotation-dominated disc.
High ratio of ordered to random motion (V/σ ≈ 11) indicates a dynamically cold disc.
Evidence suggests such stable discs formed as early as 700 million years after the Big Bang.
Abstract
We present high resolution (" = 710 pc) ALMA [CII] 158m and dust continuum follow-up observations of REBELS-25, a [CII]-luminous () galaxy at redshift . These high resolution, high signal-to-noise observations allow us to study the sub-kpc morphology and kinematics of this massive () star-forming (SFR) galaxy in the Epoch of Reionisation. By modelling the kinematics with BAROLO, we find it has a low velocity dispersion ( km s) and a high ratio of ordered-to-random motion (), indicating that REBELS-25 is a dynamically cold disc. Additionally, we find that the [CII]…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
