JWST Reveals a Possible z ∼ 11 Galaxy Merger in Triply Lensed MACS0647-JD

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  • Tiger Yu Yang Hsiao
  • Dan Coe
  • Abdurro’uf
  • Lily Whitler
  • Intae Jung
  • Gourav Khullar
  • Ashish Kumar Meena
  • Pratika Dayal
  • Kirk S.S. Barrow
  • Lillian Santos-Olmsted
  • Adam Casselman
  • Eros Vanzella
  • Mario Nonino
  • Yolanda Jiménez-Teja
  • Masamune Oguri
  • Daniel P. Stark
  • Lukas J. Furtak
  • Adi Zitrin
  • Angela Adamo
  • Larry Bradley
  • Jose M. Diego
  • Erik Zackrisson
  • Steven L. Finkelstein
  • Rogier A. Windhorst
  • Rachana Bhatawdekar
  • Taylor A. Hutchison
  • Tom Broadhurst
  • Paola Dimauro
  • Felipe Andrade-Santos
  • Jan J. Eldridge
  • Ana Acebron
  • Roberto J. Avila
  • Matthew B. Bayliss
  • Alex Benítez
  • Christian Binggeli
  • Patricia Bolan
  • Maruša Bradač
  • Adam C. Carnall
  • Christopher J. Conselice
  • Megan Donahue
  • Brenda Frye
  • Seiji Fujimoto
  • Alaina Henry
  • Bethan L. James
  • Susan A. Kassin
  • Lisa Kewley
  • Rebecca L. Larson
  • Tod Lauer
  • David Law
  • Guillaume Mahler
  • Ramesh Mainali
  • Stephan McCandliss
  • David Nicholls
  • Norbert Pirzkal
  • Marc Postman
  • Jane R. Rigby
  • Russell Ryan
  • Peter Senchyna
  • Keren Sharon
  • Ikko Shimizu
  • Mengtao Tang
  • Michele Trenti
  • Anton Vikaeus
  • Brian Welch

MACS0647-JD is a triply lensed z ∼ 11 galaxy originally discovered with the Hubble Space Telescope. The three lensed images are magnified by factors of ∼8, 5, and 2 to AB mag 25.1, 25.6, and 26.6 at 3.5 μm. The brightest is over a magnitude brighter than other galaxies recently discovered at similar redshifts z > 10 with JWST. Here, we report new JWST imaging that clearly resolves MACS0647-JD as having two components that are either merging galaxies or stellar complexes within a single galaxy. The brighter larger component “A” is intrinsically very blue (β ∼ −2.6 ± 0.1), likely due to very recent star formation and no dust, and is spatially extended with an effective radius ∼70 ± 24 pc. The smaller component “B” (r ∼ 20 − 5 + 8 pc) appears redder (β ∼ −2 ± 0.2), likely because it is older (100-200 Myr) with mild dust extinction (A V ∼ 0.1 mag). With an estimated stellar mass ratio of roughly 2:1 and physical projected separation ∼400 pc, we may be witnessing a galaxy merger 430 million years after the Big Bang. We identify galaxies with similar colors in a high-redshift simulation, finding their star formation histories to be dissimilar, which is also suggested by the spectral energy distribution fitting, suggesting they formed further apart. We also identify a candidate companion galaxy “C” ∼3 kpc away, likely destined to merge with A and B. Upcoming JWST Near Infrared Spectrograph observations planned for 2023 January will deliver spectroscopic redshifts and more physical properties for these tiny magnified distant galaxies observed in the early universe.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberL34
JournalAstrophysical Journal Letters
Volume949
Issue number2
Number of pages21
ISSN2041-8205
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2 Jun 2023

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Publisher Copyright:
© 2023. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.

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