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. 2011 Jan 27;469(7331):504-7.
doi: 10.1038/nature09717.

A candidate redshift z ≈ 10 galaxy and rapid changes in that population at an age of 500 Myr

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A candidate redshift z ≈ 10 galaxy and rapid changes in that population at an age of 500 Myr

R J Bouwens et al. Nature. .

Abstract

Searches for very-high-redshift galaxies over the past decade have yielded a large sample of more than 6,000 galaxies existing just 900-2,000 million years (Myr) after the Big Bang (redshifts 6 > z > 3; ref. 1). The Hubble Ultra Deep Field (HUDF09) data have yielded the first reliable detections of z ≈ 8 galaxies that, together with reports of a γ-ray burst at z ≈ 8.2 (refs 10, 11), constitute the earliest objects reliably reported to date. Observations of z ≈ 7-8 galaxies suggest substantial star formation at z > 9-10 (refs 12, 13). Here we use the full two-year HUDF09 data to conduct an ultra-deep search for z ≈ 10 galaxies in the heart of the reionization epoch, only 500 Myr after the Big Bang. Not only do we find one possible z ≈ 10 galaxy candidate, but we show that, regardless of source detections, the star formation rate density is much smaller (∼10%) at this time than it is just ∼200 Myr later at z ≈ 8. This demonstrates how rapid galaxy build-up was at z ≈ 10, as galaxies increased in both luminosity density and volume density from z ≈ 10 to z ≈ 8. The 100-200 Myr before z ≈ 10 is clearly a crucial phase in the assembly of the earliest galaxies.

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References

    1. Nature. 2009 Oct 29;461(7268):1254-7 - PubMed
    1. Nature. 2009 Oct 29;461(7268):1258-60 - PubMed
    1. Nature. 2010 Oct 21;467(7318):940-2 - PubMed
    1. Nature. 2010 Nov 4;468(7320):49-55 - PubMed

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