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We report measurements of the galaxy two-point correlation function at cosmic dawn, using photometrically-selected sources from the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey (JADES). The JWST/NIRCam dataset comprises approximately Ng 7000 photometrically-selected Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs), spanning in the redshift range 5 z10, finding a galaxy bias b=9. 61. 7 for the sample at z = 10. 6. The result suggests that the observed sources are hosted by dark matter halos of approximately M₇ 10^10. 6~M_, in broad agreement with theoretical and numerical modelling of early galaxy formation during the epoch of reionization. Furthermore, the JWST JADES dataset enables an unprecedented investigation of clustering of dwarf galaxies two orders of magnitude fainter than the characteristic L_* luminosity (i. e. with M₅₂₀₀ₖ-15. 8) during the late stages of the epoch of reionization at z 6. By analyzing clustering as a function of luminosity, we find that b (M₅₂₀₀ₖ) aligns with previous results for brighter galaxies and then decreases with M₅₂₀₀ₖ, as theoretically expected for fainter candidates. These initial results demonstrate the potential for further quantitative characterisation of the interplay between assembly of dark matter and light during cosmic dawn that the growing samples of JWST observations are enabling.
Dalmasso et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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