The ultraviolet continuum slopes ($\mathbfβ$) of galaxies at $\mathbf{z\simeq8-15}$ from JWST and ground-based near-infrared [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2208.04914


We study the rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) continuum slopes ($\beta$) of galaxies at redshifts $8 < z < 15$, using a combination of JWST ERO and ERS NIRcam imaging and ground-based near-infrared imaging of the COSMOS field. The combination of JWST and ground-based imaging provides a wide baseline in both redshift and absolute UV magnitude ($-22.5 < M_{\rm UV} < 18.5$), sufficient to allow a meaningful comparison to previous results at lower redshift. Using a power-law fitting technique, we find that our full sample (median $M_{\rm UV}=-19.5\pm 1.1$) returns an inverse-variance weighted mean value of $\langle \beta \rangle = -2.07 \pm 0.05$, with a corresponding median value of $\beta=-2.26\pm 0.12$. These values imply that the UV colours of galaxies at $z>8$ are, on average, no bluer than the bluest galaxies in the local Universe. Moreover, we find tentative evidence for a $\beta-M_{\rm UV}$ relation, such that brighter UV galaxies display somewhat redder UV slopes ($\rm{d}\beta/ \rm{d} M_{\rm UV} = -0.12 \pm 0.05$). Comparing to results at lower redshift, we find that the slope of our $\beta-M_{\rm UV}$ relation is fully consistent with that observed at $z\simeq 5$ and that, at a given $M_{\rm UV}$, our $8<z<15$ galaxies are somewhat bluer ($\delta \beta = -0.27 \pm 0.06$) than their $z\simeq 5$ counterparts. Finally, we do not find strong evidence that any objects in our sample display ultra-blue UV continuum slopes (i.e., $\beta\lesssim-3$) that would require their UV emission to be dominated by ultra-young, dust-free stellar populations with high Lyman-continuum escape fractions.

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F. Cullen, R. McLure, D. McLeod, et. al.
Wed, 10 Aug 22
66/66

Comments: 5 pages, 3 figures, submitted to MNRAS