During the first 500 million years of cosmic history, the first stars and
galaxies formed and seeded the cosmos with heavy elements. These early galaxies
illuminated the transition from the cosmic "dark ages" to the reionization of
the intergalactic medium. This transitional period has been largely
inaccessible to direct observation until the recent commissioning of JWST,
which has extended our observational reach into that epoch. Excitingly, the
first JWST science observations uncovered a surprisingly high abundance of
early star-forming galaxies. However, the distances (redshifts) of these
galaxies were, by necessity, estimated from multi-band photometry. Photometric
redshifts, while generally robust, can suffer from uncertainties and/or
degeneracies. Spectroscopic measurements of the precise redshifts are required
to validate these sources and to reliably quantify their space densities,
stellar masses, and star formation rates, which provide powerful constraints on
galaxy formation models and cosmology. Here we present the results of JWST
follow-up spectroscopy of a small sample of galaxies suspected to be amongst
the most distant yet observed. We confirm redshifts z > 10 for two galaxies,
including one of the first bright JWST-discovered candidates with z = 11.4, and
show that another galaxy with suggested z ~ 16 instead has z = 4.9, with strong
emission lines that mimic the expected colors of more distant objects. These
results reinforce the evidence for the rapid production of luminous galaxies in
the very young Universe, while also highlighting the necessity of spectroscopic
verification for remarkable candidates.Comment: Submitted to Natur