When, Where, and How Star Formation Happens in a Galaxy Pair at Cosmic Noon Using CANUCS JWST/NIRISS Grism Spectroscopy
Vicente Estrada-Carpenter, Marcin Sawicki, Gabe Brammer, Guillaume, Desprez, Roberto Abraham, Yoshihisa Asada, Maru\v{s}a Brada\v{c}, Kartheik G., Iyer, Nicholas S. Martis, Jasleen Matharu, Lamiya Mowla, Adam Muzzin, Ga\"el, Noirot, Ghassan T. E. Sarrouh, Victoria Strait

TL;DR
This study uses JWST/NIRISS grism spectroscopy to analyze spatially resolved star formation in a galaxy pair at z=0.87, revealing bursty, quenching, and steady star formation regions and demonstrating JWST's capabilities for such studies.
Contribution
First application of JWST/NIRISS grism data to map spatially resolved star formation and quenching in a galaxy pair at Cosmic Noon.
Findings
Identified regions of bursty, quenching, and steady star formation within the galaxies.
Detected significant radial decline in star formation rates.
Showed JWST/NIRISS's effectiveness in spatially resolving star formation processes.
Abstract
Spatially resolved studies are key to understanding when, where, and how stars form within galaxies. Using slitless grism spectra and broadband imaging from the CAnadian NIRISS Unbiased Cluster Survey (CANUCS) we study the spatially resolved properties of a strongly lensed ( = 5.41.8) z = 0.8718 galaxy pair consisting of a blue face-on galaxy (10.2 0.2 log()) with multiple star-forming clumps and a dusty red edge-on galaxy (9.9 0.3 log()). We produce accurate H maps from JWST/NIRISS grism data using a new methodology that accurately models spatially varying continuum and emission line strengths. With spatially resolved indicators, we probe star formation on timescales of 10 Myr (NIRISS H emission line maps) and 100 Myr (UV imaging and broadband SED fits). Taking the ratio of the H to UV flux (), we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
