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    Discovery of a z = 7.452 High Equivalent Width Ly\u3b1 Emitter from the Hubble Space Telescope Faint Infrared Grism Survey

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    We present the results of an unbiased search for Ly\u3b1 emission from continuum-selected 5.6 < z < 8.7 galaxies. Our data set consists of 160 orbits of G102 slitless grism spectroscopy obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope(HST)/WFC3 as part of the Faint Infrared Grism Survey (FIGS; PI: Malhotra), which obtains deep slitless spectra of all sources in four fields, and was designed to minimize contamination in observations of previously identified high-redshift galaxy candidates. The FIGS data can potentially spectroscopically confirm the redshifts of galaxies, and as Ly\u3b1 emission is resonantly scattered by neutral gas, FIGS can also constrain the ionization state of the intergalactic medium during the epoch of reionization. These data have sufficient depth to detect Ly\u3b1 emission in this epoch, as Tilvi et al. have published the FIGS detection of previously known Ly\u3b1 emission at z = 7.51. The FIGS data use five separate roll angles of HST to mitigate the contamination by nearby galaxies. We created a method that accounts for and removes the contamination from surrounding galaxies and also removes any dispersed continuum light from each individual spectrum. We searched for significant (>4\u3c3) emission lines using two different automated detection methods, free of any visual inspection biases. Applying these methods on photometrically selected high-redshift candidates between 5.6 < z < 8.7, we find two emission lines, one previously published by Tilvi et al., (2016) and a new line at 1.028 \u3bcm, which we identify as Ly\u3b1 at z = 7.452 \ub1 0.003. This newly spectroscopically confirmed galaxy has the highest Ly\u3b1 rest-frame equivalent width (EWLy\u3b1) yet published at z > 7 (140.3 \ub1 19.0 -)
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