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Astronomers Say They've Found The Most Distant Galaxy Ever Observed
Science Alert ^ | 5 AUGUST 2022 | MICHELLE STARR

Posted on 08/05/2022 5:57:15 AM PDT by Red Badger

A color image of CEERS-93316. (University of Edinburgh) SPACE

It's a record that has been broken multiple times over the past two years alone, and one that we expect to see broken again soon.

Astronomers using the newly operational James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) have announced the discovery of what appears to be the most distant galaxy yet.

If this sounds familiar, it's already happened twice this year. In April, astronomers announced their observation of a galaxy in a moment of time just 330 million years after the Big Bang. Last month, in other JWST data, another was found at a point 300 million years after the Big Bang.

The new record-holder, however, is mind-blowing. Discovered in the murk of the early Universe, it represents a time just 235 million years after the Big Bang ... practically a cosmic eye-blink, in the context of the 13.8 billion-year age of the Universe.

The discovery of the galaxy candidate, named CEERS-93316, marks the beginning of something wonderful: Webb is poised to throw the early Universe wide open, giving us an unprecedented view into the dark and mysterious reaches at the beginning of, well, everything.

A paper led by astrophysicist Callum Donnan of the University of Edinburgh has been submitted to the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, pending peer-review, and is available on preprint server arXiv.

The first billion years after the Big Bang are of intense interest to cosmologists. During this time, the hot, quantum soup that filled the Universe after it winked into existence somehow started to form everything: matter and antimatter and dark matter, stars and galaxies and dust.

Because light takes time to travel, any light reaching us from distant space represents an event buried deep in the past; so, in effect, light is a time machine for distant reaches of the Universe. But the early Universe – really early – is more challenging: it's so far away that any light that reaches us is very, very faint.

What's more, the expansion of the Universe has stretched even the most energetic waves into lackluster rays closer to infrared parts of the spectrum, making even the more visible objects hard to read.

This makes detailed reconstructions of that time very difficult. Which is all the more the shame, since it's such a critical time.

The era before the first stars were born was referred to as the Cosmic Dawn. Commencing nearly 250 million years after the Big Bang, it filled the entire Universe with an opaque cloud of hydrogen atoms.

It wasn't until ultraviolet light from the first stars and galaxies reionized the neutrally-charged hydrogen that the entire electromagnetic spectrum could propagate.

Thanks to this Epoch of Reionization, by around one billion years after the Big Bang light could once again shine unimpeded.

Naturally, we want to know more about the Universe's youth during this foggy period; how those first stars formed in the dawn clouds, how galaxies came together, how supermassive black holes could form so quickly in the first hundreds of millions of years of existence. Peering back at that distant, misty time is one of the primary tasks for which Webb is designed.

Webb can capture near-infrared and infrared light, with the highest resolution of any telescope ever sent into space. It is designed to excel at detecting those very highly redshifted galaxies, so that cosmologists can finally get a detailed look at what's happening, if not at Cosmic Dawn, then at least during Reionization.

CEERS-93316, according to Donnan and his colleagues, has to be at least pretty close to one of the very first galaxies after the Big Bang. The team ruled out other potential explanations for the dim, red glow, and their analysis suggests that star formation in the galaxy candidate had to have started sometime between 120 and 220 million years after the Big Bang.

In order to confirm the object's identity, however, follow-up spectroscopic observations will need to be undertaken. This would hopefully confirm the redshift; from there, the object could become the subject of further, more detailed study, and help construct a census of early Universe objects.

If CEERS-93316 is a galaxy, it probably won't be wearing the Most Distant Galaxy Ever sash for long. Even if CEERS-93316 doesn't turn out to be a galaxy that distant, odds are good that we won't have long to wait for Webb to turn up an object that is.

Bring us those dim, red, distant treasures, Webb. We can't wait.

The research was submitted to the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, and is available on arXiv.


TOPICS: Arts/Photography; Astronomy; History; Science
KEYWORDS: galaxy
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To: Red Badger

Man confidently telling me how the universe was created and how old it is to the precise year is equivalent to a toddler tell me how a skyscraper is built...


21 posted on 08/05/2022 8:52:43 AM PDT by sit-rep ( )
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To: Red Badger; Magnum44; dfwgator
And then it turned out to be a Bic Bang.


22 posted on 08/05/2022 9:45:58 AM PDT by Ezekiel (🆘️ . . . - - - . . . "Come fly with US". Ingenuity -- because the Son of David begins with Mars ♂️)
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To: Red Badger

It doesn’t seem like that “micrometeorite” did much damage.
Amazing technology.

I can’t wait til they REALLY push the envelope!


23 posted on 08/05/2022 9:49:45 AM PDT by telescope115 (Proud member of the ANTIFAuci movement. )
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To: Red Badger

Are we sure it’s not just the butt-end of our universe?


24 posted on 08/05/2022 10:41:45 AM PDT by moovova
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To: Red Badger

Who cares?


25 posted on 08/05/2022 10:54:29 AM PDT by faucetman (Just the facts, ma'am, Just the facts )
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To: Red Badger

All I can say about that photo is “FOCUS!”


26 posted on 08/05/2022 3:57:24 PM PDT by minnesota_bound (Need more money to buy everything now)
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To: Red Badger

Irony:

The Big Bang Theory Has Been Debunked?

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/the-big-bang-theory-has-been-debunked/ar-AA10SJTD


27 posted on 08/21/2022 3:26:37 PM PDT by logi_cal869 (-cynicus the "concern troll" a/o 10/03/2018 /!i!! &@$%&*(@ -)
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