Bound star clusters observed in a lensed galaxy 460 Myr after the Big Bang

Author:

Adamo AngelaORCID,Bradley Larry D.,Vanzella ErosORCID,Claeyssens Adélaïde,Welch Brian,Diego Jose M.ORCID,Mahler Guillaume,Oguri MasamuneORCID,Sharon KerenORCID,Abdurro’uf ,Hsiao Tiger Yu-Yang,Xu XinfengORCID,Messa MatteoORCID,Lassen Augusto E.ORCID,Zackrisson Erik,Brammer GabrielORCID,Coe DanORCID,Kokorev VasilyORCID,Ricotti Massimo,Zitrin AdiORCID,Fujimoto SeijiORCID,Inoue Akio K.ORCID,Resseguier TomORCID,Rigby Jane R.ORCID,Jiménez-Teja Yolanda,Windhorst Rogier A.,Hashimoto Takuya,Tamura YoichiORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe Cosmic Gems arc is among the brightest and highly magnified galaxies observed at redshift z ≈ 10.2 (ref. 1). However, it is an intrinsically ultraviolet faint galaxy, in the range of those now thought to drive the reionization of the Universe2–4. Hitherto the smallest features resolved in a galaxy at a comparable redshift are between a few hundreds and a few tens of parsecs (pc)5,6. Here we report JWST observations of the Cosmic Gems. The light of the galaxy is resolved into five star clusters located in a region smaller than 70 pc. They exhibit minimal dust attenuation and low metallicity, ages younger than 50 Myr and intrinsic masses of about 106M. Their lensing-corrected sizes are approximately 1 pc, resulting in stellar surface densities near 105M pc−2, three orders of magnitude higher than typical young star clusters in the local Universe7. Despite the uncertainties inherent to the lensing model, they are consistent with being gravitationally bound stellar systems, that is, proto-globular clusters. We conclude that star cluster formation and feedback likely contributed to shaping the properties of galaxies during the epoch of reionization.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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