JWST NIRCam + NIRSpec: interstellar medium and stellar populations of young galaxies with rising star formation and evolving gas reservoirs
JWST NIRCam + NIRSpec: interstellar medium and stellar populations of young galaxies with rising star formation and evolving gas reservoirs
May 10, 2023·,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Sandro Tacchella
Benjamin D. Johnson
Brant E. Robertson
Stefano Carniani
Francesco D'Eugenio
Nimisha Kumari
Roberto Maiolino
Erica J. Nelson
Katherine A. Suess
Hannah Übler
Christina C. Williams
Alabi Adebusola
Stacey Alberts
Santiago Arribas
Rachana Bhatawdekar
Nina Bonaventura
Rebecca A. A. Bowler
Andrew J. Bunker
Alex J. Cameron
Mirko Curti
Eiichi Egami
Daniel J. Eisenstein
Brenda Frye
Kevin Hainline
Jakob M. Helton
Zhiyuan Ji
Tobias J. Looser
Jianwei Lyu
Michele Perna
Timothy Rawle
George Rieke
Marcia Rieke
Aayush Saxena
Lester Sandles
Irene Shivaei
Charlotte Simmonds
Fengwu Sun
Christopher N. A. Willmer
Chris J. Willott
Joris Witstok
Abstract
We present an interstellar medium and stellar population analysis of three spectroscopically confirmed $z > 7$
galaxies in the Early Release Observations JWST/NIRCam and JWST/NIRSpec data of the SMACS J0723.3-7327 cluster. We use the Bayesian spectral energy distribution-fitting code Prospector with a flexible star formation history (SFH), a variable dust attenuation law, and a self-consistent model of nebular emission (continuum and emission lines). Importantly, we self-consistently fit both the emission line fluxes from JWST/NIRSpec and the broad-band photometry from JWST/NIRCam, taking into account slit-loss effects. We find that these three $z = 7.6-8.5$
galaxies ($M_{\ast} \approx 10^{8}\ M_{\odot}$
) are young with rising SFHs and mass-weighted ages of $3-4\ \mathrm{Myr}$
, though we find indications for underlying older stellar populations. The inferred gas-phase metallicities broadly agree with the direct metallicity estimates from the auroral lines. The galaxy with the lowest gas-phase metallicity ($Z_{\mathrm{gas}} = 0.06\ Z_{\odot}$
) has a steeply rising SFH, is very compact ($< 0.2\ \mathrm{kpc}$
), and has a high star formation rate surface density ($\Sigma_{\mathrm{SFR}} \approx 22\ M_{\odot}/\mathrm{yr/kpc}^{2}$
), consistent with rapid gas accretion. The two other objects with higher gas-phase metallicities show more complex multicomponent morphologies on kpc scales, indicating that their recent increase in star formation rate is driven by mergers or internal, gravitational instabilities. We discuss effects of assuming different SFH priors or only fitting the photometric data. Our analysis highlights the strength and importance of combining JWST imaging and spectroscopy for fully assessing the nature of galaxies at the earliest epochs.
Type
Publication
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 522, Issue 4, pages 6236-6249