Extreme Ionizing Properties of Metal-Poor, Muv ~ -12 Star Complex in the first Gyr
E. Vanzella, F. Loiacono, M. Messa, M. Castellano, P. Bergamini, A., Zanella, F. Annibali, B. Sun, M. Dickinson, A. Adamo, F. Calura, M. Ricotti,, P. Rosati, M. Meneghetti, C. Grillo, M. Bradac, C. J. Conselice, H. Yan, A., Bolamperti, U. Mestric, R. Gilli, M. Gronke, C. Willott

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a faint, low-metallicity, high-ionizing-efficiency star complex at z=6.146, likely powered by massive O-type stars, providing insights into early star formation and reionization.
Contribution
It presents the first spectroscopic detection of an extremely faint, low-metallicity star complex with high ionizing efficiency at high redshift, revealing potential early massive star formation in low-mass systems.
Findings
Detected strong emission lines indicating high ionizing photon production
Estimated stellar mass below a few 10^4 solar masses
Suggests presence of massive stars in a low-mass, low-metallicity environment
Abstract
We report the serendipitous discovery of a faint (M_UV > -12.2), low-metallicity (Z ~ 0.02 Zsun), ionizing source (dubbed T2c) with a spectroscopic redshift of z=6.146. T2c is part of a larger structure amplified by the Hubble Frontier Field galaxy cluster MACSJ0416, and was observed with JWST/NIRSpec IFU. Stacking the short-wavelength NIRCam data reveals no stellar continuum detection down to a magnitude limit of m_UV ~ 31.0 (3 sigma). However, prominent Hb, [OIII]4959,5007, and Ha emissions are detected, with equivalent widths exceeding 200A, 800A, and 1300A (3 sigma), respectively. The corresponding intrinsic (magnification-corrected x23 +/- 3) ultraviolet and optical rest-frame magnitudes exceed 34.4 and 33.9 (corresponding to M_uv and M_opt fainter than -12.2 and -12.8, at lambda_rest ~ 2000A and ~5000A, respectively), suggesting a stellar mass lower than a few 10^4 Msun under an…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Nuclear physics research studies
