Detection of the 2175Å UV Bump at z>7: Evidence for Rapid Dust Evolution in a Merging Reionisation-Era Galaxy

Kavli Affiliate: Roberto Maiolino

| First 5 Authors: , , , ,

| Summary:

Dust is a fundamental component of the interstellar medium (ISM) within
galaxies, as dust grains are highly efficient absorbers of UV and optical
photons. Accurately quantifying this obscuration is crucial for interpreting
galaxy spectral energy distributions (SEDs). The extinction curves in the Milky
Way (MW) and Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) exhibit a strong feature known as the
2175A UV bump, most often attributed to small carbonaceous dust grains. This
feature was recently detected in faint galaxies out to z=7.55 suggesting rapid
formation channels. Here we report the detection of a strong UV bump in a
luminous Lyman-break galaxy at z = 7.11235, GNWY-7379420231, through
observations taken as part of the NIRSpec Wide GTO survey. We fit a dust
attenuation curve that is consistent with the MW extinction curve within
1sigma, in a galaxy just ~700 Myr after the Big Bang. From the integrated
spectrum, we infer a young mass-weighted age (t* ~ 22-59 Myr) for this galaxy,
however spatially resolved SED fitting unveils the presence of an older stellar
population (t* ~ 252 Myr). Furthermore, morphological analysis provides
evidence for a potential merger. The underlying older stellar population
suggests the merging system could be pre-enriched, with the dust illuminated by
a merger-induced starburst. Moreover, turbulence driven by stellar feedback in
this bursty region may be driving PAH formation through top-down shattering.
The presence of a UV bump in GNWY-7379420231 solidifies growing evidence for
the rapid evolution of dust properties within the first billion years of cosmic
time.

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