GLIMPSE: An ultra-faint $\simeq$ 10$^{5}$ $M_{\odot}$ Pop III Galaxy Candidate and First Constraints on the Pop III UV Luminosity Function at $z\simeq6-7$
Seiji Fujimoto, Rohan P. Naidu, John Chisholm, Hakim Atek, Ryan, Endsley, Vasily Kokorev, Lukas J. Furtak, Richard Pan, Boyuan Liu, Volker, Bromm, Alessandra Venditti, Eli Visbal, Richard Sarmento, Andrea Weibel,, Pascal A. Oesch, Gabriel Brammer, Daniel Schaerer, Angela Adamo

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a candidate Population III galaxy at z~6.5 using JWST data, providing new constraints on the Pop III UV luminosity function and demonstrating a novel detection method for these elusive first-generation stars.
Contribution
It introduces a new NIRCam-based selection method for PopIII galaxies, validated through simulations, and applies it to identify a promising candidate, advancing the search for the first stars.
Findings
Discovered a PopIII galaxy candidate at z=6.5 with unique spectral features.
Provided the first observational constraints on the PopIII UV luminosity function at z~6-7.
Volume density of the candidate matches theoretical predictions.
Abstract
Detecting the first generation of stars, Population III (PopIII), has been a long-standing goal in astrophysics, yet they remain elusive even in the JWST era. Here we present a novel NIRCam-based selection method for PopIII galaxies, and carefully validate it through completeness and contamination simulations. We systematically search ~500 arcmin across JWST legacy fields for PopIII candidates, including GLIMPSE which, assisted by gravitational lensing, has produced JWST's deepest NIRCam imaging thus far. We discover one promising PopIII galaxy candidate (GLIMPSE-16043) at , a moderately lensed galaxy (mu=2.9) with an intrinsic UV magnitude of =-15.89. It exhibits key PopIII features: strong H emission (rest-frame EW \AA); a Balmer jump; no dust (UV slope ); and undetectable metal lines (e.g., [OIII];…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
