Before its time: a remarkably evolved protocluster core at z=7.88
Callum Witten, Pascal A. Oesch, William McClymont, Romain A. Meyer, Yoshinobu Fudamoto, Debora Sijacki, Nicolas Laporte, Jake S. Bennett, Charlotte Simmonds, Emma Giovinazzo, A. Lola Danhaive, Laure Ciesla, Cristian Carvajal-Bohorquez, Maxime Trebitsch

TL;DR
This study uses JWST observations to analyze a highly evolved protocluster at z=7.88, revealing diverse galaxy populations, high stellar masses, and extreme environmental conditions just 650 million years after the Big Bang.
Contribution
First detailed characterization of a remarkably evolved protocluster at z=7.88, highlighting environmental effects on early galaxy evolution with new member identifications.
Findings
Identified 7 new protocluster members, total 23.
Protocluster galaxies show redder UV slopes and stronger Balmer breaks.
Core galaxies are dusty and massive; outskirts have recent starbursts.
Abstract
Protoclusters represent the most extreme environments in the very early Universe. They form from large-scale dark matter overdensities, harbouring an overabundance of galaxies fed by large gas reservoirs. Their early and accelerated evolution results in a distinct difference in the properties of galaxies resident in protoclusters versus the field, which is known to be in place by . We utilise JWST NIRCam observations of the A2744-z7p9OD protocluster at to constrain the properties of resident galaxies. We identify seven new protocluster members, bringing the total number to 23 and the total stellar mass of the protocluster to in excess of . These galaxies are remarkably evolved just 650 Myr after the Big Bang, preferentially showing redder UV-slopes and stronger Balmer breaks than is typical of field galaxies. We use the PROSPECTOR spectral…
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