TY - JOUR
T1 - A Glimpse of the New Redshift Frontier through AS1063
AU - Kokorev, Vasily
AU - Atek, Hakim
AU - Chisholm, John
AU - Endsley, Ryan
AU - Chemerynska, Iryna
AU - Muñoz, Julian B.
AU - Furtak, Lukas J.
AU - Pan, Richard
AU - Berg, Danielle
AU - Fujimoto, Seiji
AU - Oesch, Pascal A.
AU - Weibel, Andrea
AU - Adamo, Angela
AU - Blaizot, Jeremy
AU - Bouwens, Rychard
AU - Dessauges-Zavadsky, Miroslava
AU - Khullar, Gourav
AU - Korber, Damien
AU - Goovaerts, Ilias
AU - Jecmen, Michelle
AU - Labbé, Ivo
AU - Leclercq, Floriane
AU - Marques-Chaves, Rui
AU - Mason, Charlotte
AU - McQuinn, Kristen B.W.
AU - Naidu, Rohan
AU - Natarajan, Priyamvada
AU - Nelson, Erica
AU - Rosdahl, Joki
AU - Saldana-Lopez, Alberto
AU - Schaerer, Daniel
AU - Trebitsch, Maxime
AU - Volonteri, Marta
AU - Zitrin, Adi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.
PY - 2025/4/8
Y1 - 2025/4/8
N2 - We report the discovery of two galaxy candidates at redshifts between 15.7 < z < 16.4 in James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) observations from the GLIMPSE survey. These robust sources were identified using a combination of Lyman break selection and photometric redshift estimates. The ultradeep NIRCam imaging from GLIMPSE, combined with the strong gravitational lensing of the AS1063 galaxy cluster, allows us to probe an intrinsically fainter population (down to MUV = −17.0 mag) than previously achievable. These galaxies have absolute magnitudes ranging from MUV = −17.0 to −17.2 mag, with blue (β ≃ −2.87) ultraviolet (UV) continuum slopes, consistent with young, dust-free stellar populations. The number density of these objects, log10(ϕ/[Mpc−3 mag−1]) = − 3.4 7 − 0.10 + 0.13 at MUV = −17, is in clear tension with pre-JWST theoretical predictions, extending the overabundance of galaxies from z ∼ 10 to z ∼ 17. These results, together with the scarcity of brighter galaxies in other public surveys, suggest a steep decline in the bright end of the UV luminosity function at z ∼ 16, implying efficient star formation and possibly a close connection to the halo mass function at these redshifts. Testing a variety of star formation histories suggests that these sources are plausible progenitors of the unusually UV-bright galaxies that JWST now routinely uncovers at z = 10-14. Overall, our results indicate that the luminosity distribution of the earliest star-forming galaxies could be shifting toward fainter luminosities, implying that future surveys of cosmic dawn will need to explore this faint luminosity regime.
AB - We report the discovery of two galaxy candidates at redshifts between 15.7 < z < 16.4 in James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) observations from the GLIMPSE survey. These robust sources were identified using a combination of Lyman break selection and photometric redshift estimates. The ultradeep NIRCam imaging from GLIMPSE, combined with the strong gravitational lensing of the AS1063 galaxy cluster, allows us to probe an intrinsically fainter population (down to MUV = −17.0 mag) than previously achievable. These galaxies have absolute magnitudes ranging from MUV = −17.0 to −17.2 mag, with blue (β ≃ −2.87) ultraviolet (UV) continuum slopes, consistent with young, dust-free stellar populations. The number density of these objects, log10(ϕ/[Mpc−3 mag−1]) = − 3.4 7 − 0.10 + 0.13 at MUV = −17, is in clear tension with pre-JWST theoretical predictions, extending the overabundance of galaxies from z ∼ 10 to z ∼ 17. These results, together with the scarcity of brighter galaxies in other public surveys, suggest a steep decline in the bright end of the UV luminosity function at z ∼ 16, implying efficient star formation and possibly a close connection to the halo mass function at these redshifts. Testing a variety of star formation histories suggests that these sources are plausible progenitors of the unusually UV-bright galaxies that JWST now routinely uncovers at z = 10-14. Overall, our results indicate that the luminosity distribution of the earliest star-forming galaxies could be shifting toward fainter luminosities, implying that future surveys of cosmic dawn will need to explore this faint luminosity regime.
U2 - 10.3847/2041-8213/adc458
DO - 10.3847/2041-8213/adc458
M3 - Letter
AN - SCOPUS:105002595937
SN - 2041-8205
VL - 983
JO - Astrophysical Journal Letters
JF - Astrophysical Journal Letters
IS - 1
M1 - L22
ER -