Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Contini, M.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.20931
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866910239982354432
author Contini, M.
author_facet Contini, M.
contents Spectra from the cosmic dawn obtained with JWST/NIRSpec (James Webb Space Telescope near-infrared spectroscopy) in the SMACS0723 Early Release Observations are now available. Analyses carried out by different teams indicate poor to extremely low oxygen metallicities (log(O/H)+12<8.0), a characteristic feature of pristine galaxies. In this work, we present new modelling of spectra emitted by objects in the redshift range 2.16<=z<= 8.68, including their recently corrected spectra in the z = 2-9 range. The models account for both photoionisation and shock processes. Our aim is to identify similarities and differences with respect to local galaxies by searching for possible remnants of pristine galaxies among low-z objects. We analyse selected emission-line ratios in relation to elemental abundances and physical parameters. We find that the gaseous clouds within galaxies at cosmic dawn have preshock densities at least a factor of 100 higher than those in local galaxies, but comparable to those calculated for local metal-poor galaxies at 0.005<z<0.05. The metallicities log(O/H)+12 and log(Ne/H)+12 range between 7.9 and 8.55, and between 7.0 and 7.48, respectively. Uncorrected observed Hg/Hb line ratios are mostly >0.5, indicating high temperatures (>10^5K) in the emitting gas. Clear affinities are evident between the high-z galaxy spectra and those of local metal-poor galaxies at 0.005<z<0.05. However, in order to reproduce all the observed line ratios for each spectrum - including Hg/Hb values as high as ~0.8 - emission from cloud fragments was added to that from the main clouds in the pluri-cloud models. We suggest that fragments close to pristine galaxies were destroyed by events that occurred between z>6 and z<0.05, whereas some cloud remnants of pristine galaxies survived and are now found embedded, for example, at 0.005<z<0.05.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2605_20931
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Interpretations of galaxy spectra at high redshift. \ The H_gamma/H_beta excess
Contini, M.
Astrophysics of Galaxies
Spectra from the cosmic dawn obtained with JWST/NIRSpec (James Webb Space Telescope near-infrared spectroscopy) in the SMACS0723 Early Release Observations are now available. Analyses carried out by different teams indicate poor to extremely low oxygen metallicities (log(O/H)+12<8.0), a characteristic feature of pristine galaxies. In this work, we present new modelling of spectra emitted by objects in the redshift range 2.16<=z<= 8.68, including their recently corrected spectra in the z = 2-9 range. The models account for both photoionisation and shock processes. Our aim is to identify similarities and differences with respect to local galaxies by searching for possible remnants of pristine galaxies among low-z objects. We analyse selected emission-line ratios in relation to elemental abundances and physical parameters. We find that the gaseous clouds within galaxies at cosmic dawn have preshock densities at least a factor of 100 higher than those in local galaxies, but comparable to those calculated for local metal-poor galaxies at 0.005<z<0.05. The metallicities log(O/H)+12 and log(Ne/H)+12 range between 7.9 and 8.55, and between 7.0 and 7.48, respectively. Uncorrected observed Hg/Hb line ratios are mostly >0.5, indicating high temperatures (>10^5K) in the emitting gas. Clear affinities are evident between the high-z galaxy spectra and those of local metal-poor galaxies at 0.005<z<0.05. However, in order to reproduce all the observed line ratios for each spectrum - including Hg/Hb values as high as ~0.8 - emission from cloud fragments was added to that from the main clouds in the pluri-cloud models. We suggest that fragments close to pristine galaxies were destroyed by events that occurred between z>6 and z<0.05, whereas some cloud remnants of pristine galaxies survived and are now found embedded, for example, at 0.005<z<0.05.
title Interpretations of galaxy spectra at high redshift. \ The H_gamma/H_beta excess
topic Astrophysics of Galaxies
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.20931