JWST's PEARLS: A clumpy ring galaxy at $z = 4.0148$
David Vizgan, Ming-Yang Zhuang, Ian Smail, Rogier Windhorst, Gibson Bowling, Cheng Cheng, Seth Cohen, Christopher Conselice, Jose Diego, Brenda Frye, Norman Grogin, Rolf Jansen, Patrick Kamieneski, Anton Koekemoer, Rafael Ortiz III, Massimo Ricotti, Bangzheng Sun

TL;DR
This paper reports JWST observations of a high-redshift galaxy with a ring-like morphology, likely caused by a galaxy collision, but possibly due to gravitational lensing, highlighting its importance in galaxy evolution studies.
Contribution
First detailed JWST imaging and spectroscopy of a candidate high-redshift collisional ring galaxy, discussing its morphology, star formation, and potential lensing nature.
Findings
Galaxy at z=4.0148 exhibits a ring with three bright clumps.
Star formation rate estimated at 140 solar masses per year.
Morphology could be due to collision or gravitational lensing.
Abstract
Ring galaxies are an uncommon class of galaxies whose morphology is closely related to dynamical processes that govern galaxy evolution. Some ring galaxies, known as "collisional ring galaxies", are thought to form as a consequence of head-on collisions between galaxies, and a number of high-redshift collisional ring galaxies have been discovered and/or studied in the era of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). In this paper, we present HST/ACS, JWST/NIRCam, and JWST/NIRSpec observations of a candidate ring galaxy at , previously identified as a potential gravitational lens. The galaxy exhibits a complex morphology, including three bright clumps along an apparent ring with radius " kpc. It has a total SFR yr and , making it similar to…
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