Abstract

We analyse near-infrared Hubble Space Telescope (HST)/Near-Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer F110W (J) and F160W (H) band photometry of a sample of 27 i′-drop candidate z≃ 6 galaxies in the central region of the HST/Advanced Camera for Surveys Ultra Deep Field. The infrared colours of the 20 objects not affected by near neighbours are consistent with a high-redshift interpretation. This suggests that the low-redshift contamination of this i′-drop sample is smaller than that observed at brighter magnitudes, where values of 10–40 per cent have been reported. The J–H colours are consistent with a slope flat in fν(fλ∝λ−2), as would be expected for an unreddened starburst. However, there is evidence for a marginally bluer spectral slope (fλ∝λ−2.2), which is perhaps indicative of an extremely young starburst (∼10 Myr old) or a top heavy initial mass function and little dust. The low levels of contamination, median photometric redshift of z∼ 6.0 and blue spectral slope, inferred using the near-infrared data, support the validity of the assumptions in our earlier work in estimating the star formation rates, and that the majority of the i-drop candidates galaxies lie at z∼ 6.

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