Posted on 05/05/2015 10:50:45 AM PDT by Red Badger
An international team of astronomers led by Yale University and the University of California-Santa Cruz have pushed back the cosmic frontier of galaxy exploration to a time when the universe was only 5% of its present age.
The team discovered an exceptionally luminous galaxy more than 13 billion years in the past and determined its exact distance from Earth using the powerful MOSFIRE instrument on the W.M. Keck Observatory's 10-meter telescope, in Hawaii. It is the most distant galaxy currently measured.
The galaxy, EGS-zs8-1, was originally identified based on its particular colors in images from NASA's Hubble and Spitzer space telescopes. It is one of the brightest and most massive objects in the early universe.
Age and distance are vitally connected in any discussion of the universe. The light we see from our Sun takes just eight minutes to reach us, while the light from distant galaxies we see via today's advanced telescopes travels for billions of years before it reaches usso we're seeing what those galaxies looked like billions of years ago.
"It has already built more than 15% of the mass of our own Milky Way today," said Pascal Oesch, a Yale astronomer and lead author of a study published online May 5 in Astrophysical Journal Letters. "But it had only 670 million years to do so. The universe was still very young then." The new distance measurement also enabled the astronomers to determine that EGS-zs8-1 is still forming stars rapidly, about 80 times faster than our galaxy.
Only a handful of galaxies currently have accurate distances measured in this very early universe. "Every confirmation adds another piece to the puzzle of how the first generations of galaxies formed in the early universe," said Pieter van Dokkum, the Sol Goldman Family Professor of Astronomy and chair of Yale's Department of Astronomy, who is second author of the study. "Only the largest telescopes are powerful enough to reach to these large distances."
The MOSFIRE instrument allows astronomers to efficiently study several galaxies at the same time. Measuring galaxies at extreme distances and characterizing their properties will be a major goal of astronomy over the next decade, the researchers said.
The new observations establish EGS-zs8-1 at a time when the universe was undergoing an important change: The hydrogen between galaxies was transitioning from a neutral state to an ionized state. "It appears that the young stars in the early galaxies like EGS-zs8-1 were the main drivers for this transition, called reionization," said Rychard Bouwens of the Leiden Observatory, co-author of the study.
Taken together, the new Keck Observatory, Hubble, and Spitzer observations also pose new questions. They confirm that massive galaxies already existed early in the history of the universe, but they also show that those galaxies had very different physical properties from what is seen around us today. Astronomers now have strong evidence that the peculiar colors of early galaxiesseen in the Spitzer imagesoriginate from a rapid formation of massive, young stars, which interacted with the primordial gas in these galaxies.
The observations underscore the exciting discoveries that are possible when NASA's James Webb Space Telescope is launched in 2018, note the researchers. In addition to pushing the cosmic frontier to even earlier times, the telescope will be able to dissect the galaxy light of EGS-zs8-1 seen with the Spitzer telescope and provide astronomers with more detailed insights into its gas properties.
"Our current observations indicate that it will be very easy to measure accurate distances to these distant galaxies in the future with the James Webb Space Telescope," said co-author Garth Illingworth of the University of California-Santa Cruz. "The result of JWST's upcoming measurements will provide a much more complete picture of the formation of galaxies at the cosmic dawn."
Journal reference: Astrophysical Journal Letters
The galaxy EGS-zs8-1 sets a new distance record. It was discovered in images from the Hubble Space Telescope's CANDELS survey. Credit: NASA, ESA, P. Oesch and I. Momcheva (Yale University), and the 3D-HST and HUDF09/XDF teams
Astronomy Ping!..............
The place where Democrats occupy is about the farthest galaxy from reality.
What if there is no edge to the universe?
Is 13 billion a big number? Now what's the national debt?
“O” will impose one by executive order... then there WILL be one!! :)
If it’s expanding, what is it expanding into?..............
Those were the days...............
That would mean that objects of that distance should be found in every direction.
That's what they're saying on EGS-zs8-1.
If there is an edge to the universe, what’s on the other side?
“an exceptionally luminous galaxy more than 13 billion years in the past”
Meaning it’s more than 13 billion light years away, a light year being the *distance” light travels in a year at its speed of 186,000 miles/second. One light year works out to about 5.9 TRILLION miles. So 13 BILLION x 5.9 TRILLION is how far away this thing is in miles.
Or 76.7 x 1,000,000,000 x 1,000,000,000,000 Miles
Farther than the farthest star?...........maybe not:
http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2009/28apr_grbsmash/
We fall off the edge.
Souce : Christopher Columbus crew on the Santa Maria
Except we ain't where we was 13 billion years ago.
But we’re talking about today. Not 13 billion years ago. That galaxy is at a distance 13 billion light years away *today*. 13 billion years ago we were ‘inches’ away from it, or something like that. We were so close we could smell it!
Close, but no cigar, exploding or otherwise. The galaxy is MORE THAN 13 billion light years away. The long-dead star that created the gamma-ray burst, a 'mere' 13 billion LY.
From your link...
"April 28, 2009: NASA's Swift satellite and an international team of astronomers have found a gamma-ray burst from a star that died when the universe was only 630 million years old--less than five percent of its present age. The event, dubbed GRB 090423, is the most distant cosmic explosion ever seen.
(snip)
The burst occurred at 3:55 a.m. EDT on April 23rd. Swift quickly pinpointed the explosion, allowing telescopes on Earth to target the burst before its afterglow faded away. Astronomers working in Chile and the Canary Islands independently measured the explosion's redshift. It was 8.2, smashing the previous record of 6.7 set by an explosion in September 2008. A redshift of 8.2 corresponds to a distance of 13.035 billion light years."
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