JWST Reveals a Possible z ∼ 11 Galaxy Merger in Triply Lensed MACS0647–JD
Finkelstein, Steven L.; Hutchison, Taylor A.; Larson, Rebecca L.; Mahler, Guillaume; Donahue, Megan; Broadhurst, Tom; Conselice, Christopher J.; Henry, Alaina; Bradač, Maruša; Strait, Victoria; Fujimoto, Seiji; James, Bethan L.; Brammer, Gabriel; Jung, Intae; Tang, Mengtao; Stark, Daniel P.; Oguri, Masamune; Bhatawdekar, Rachana; Whitler, Lily; Rigby, Jane R.; Nicholls, David; Acebron, Ana; Zitrin, Adi; Coe, Dan; Andrade-Santos, Felipe; Frye, Brenda; Sharon, Keren; Trenti, Michele; Bradley, Larry; Mainali, Ramesh; Windhorst, Rogier A.; Ryan, Russell; Postman, Marc; Nonino, Mario; Jiménez-Teja, Yolanda; Bayliss, Matthew B.; Adamo, Angela; Pirzkal, Norbert; Kewley, Lisa; Khullar, Gourav; Lauer, Tod; Zackrisson, Erik; Dayal, Pratika; Furtak, Lukas J.; Senchyna, Peter; Carnall, Adam C.; Vanzella, Eros; Welch, Brian; Diego, Jose M.; Hsiao, Tiger Yu-Yang; Abdurro'uf; Eldridge, Jan J.; Kassin, Susan A.; McCandliss, Stephan; Meena, Ashish Kumar; Barrow, Kirk S. S.; Santos-Olmsted, Lillian; Casselman, Adam; Dimauro, Paola; Avila, Roberto J.; Benítez, Alex; Binggeli, Christian; Bolan, Patricia; Law, David; Shimizu, Ikko; Vikaeus, Anton
United States, Israel, Netherlands, Italy, Spain, Brazil, Japan, Sweden, Denmark, New Zealand, United Kingdom, Slovenia, Australia
Abstract
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