Posted on 12/24/2004 6:07:04 PM PST by neverdem
Fourteen billion years after the Big Bang started it all, there is still life in the old cosmos.
Astronomers announced yesterday that they had discovered three dozen baby galaxies in what passes for nearby space in the universe - two billion to four billion light-years distant. The galaxies, which are blossoming with new stars at a prodigious rate, resemble the infant Milky Way 10 billion years ago, the astronomers said.
Studying these new galaxies could give cosmologists new insights into the processes by which galaxies and stars first formed out of clouds of primordial gas and dust at the beginning of time.
"It's like looking out your window and seeing a dinosaur walk by," said Dr. Tim Heckman of Johns Hopkins University, who led a team using a NASA satellite, the Galaxy Evolution Explorer, or Galex, to pinpoint the newborns. Dr. Heckman spoke in Pasadena, Calif., at a news conference at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which manages the satellite. A paper describing the results has been submitted to The Astrophysical Journal.
The babies were a pleasant surprise.
Like the parents of a woman of a certain age who long ago gave up hope of grandchildren, astronomers had given up hope that the universe was still producing galaxies that could grow up to be the size of the Milky Way. The heyday of making stars, the active ingredients of galaxies, was five billion to eight billion years ago. Perhaps only dwarf galaxies were being born today.
"We didn't know if there were any newborns still around or if this phase of cosmic creation is over," Dr. Heckman explained.
The baby galaxies appear as bluish blobs of light about 10,000 light-years across in images sent back by the Galex satellite, which was launched in 2003 on a 29-month mission to survey the sky for ultraviolet emissions.
Ultraviolet light, which has a shorter wavelength than visible light, is produced by the hottest, most massive stars, like those of the Pleiades cluster, which shines in the sky above Orion these frigid crystalline nights. Because such stars do not last very long, they are also among the youngest stars in the sky.
As a result, young galaxies stand out in ultraviolet light, said Dr. Chris Martin of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the principal investigator for the Galex project. "Ultraviolet traces star formation," Dr. Martin said.
The hitch for astronomers hoping to study the recent evolution of stars and galaxies is that the atmosphere blocks ultraviolet rays from reaching Earth. So ultraviolet astronomy can be pursued only in space, with instruments like the Hubble Space Telescope and Galex.
Galex is designed to spot the ultraviolet glows of young stars and galaxies and thus help fill in the history of star formation and cosmic evolution over the last 10 billion years. It has a specially designed 20-inch-diameter telescope with a field of view four times as big as a full moon.
The new babies are only the first results of the project, and the astronomers said they expected to find more, although not many.
While they are not nearly the size of mature galaxies like the Milky Way, which is about 100,000 light-years across and has about 200 billion stars, the newborn galaxies outshine them in ultraviolet by a factor of 100 or so, which means they are producing stars "at a prodigious rate," in the words of Dr. Martin.
Dr. Alice Shapley, a theorist at the University of California, described them as "stragglers" of the great wave of galaxy formation that peaked when the universe was half its present age.
It is important, Dr. Shapley said, to try to find out what is finally causing these galaxies to form now. Are they accreting fresh star material from outside, for example? Indeed, she said, astronomers still do not know for sure whether these are really new galaxies, or whether perhaps they are old galaxies, hiding old stars inside them, that are undergoing a new burst of star formation.
These would be ideal objects to study with the Hubble Space Telescope, she added.
What will happen to these newborns is another mystery, Dr. Heckman said.
The infant Milky Way coalesced out of the murk 10 billion years ago, when the universe was more crowded and baby galaxies could bang into one another, merge and grow. "It's less clear what will happen in the future," Dr Heckman said.
The universe is now a more diffuse place, and the baby galaxies may have been born into loneliness. If so, they will never grow up.
Indeed. But the question was for stars. Any individual star is ver close on a cosmic scale. Heck, the Andromeda galaxy is close by cosmic standards.
Here is a chart on the stellar sequence. :-)
A few people have claimed to observe galaxy M33 (Triangulum) unaided. It's close enough to us that its angle of size in the sky is greater than that of the moon, but it's surface brightness is very low. I have never been able to find M33 with binoculars.
About 4 people say they have observed galaxy M81 unaided, which is 12 million light years distant. If this is true, the conditions would have to be extraordinary, and there are probably only a handful of people on Earth who's vision is that sharp.
M31 for your pleasure
He is MAJOR cool. UNbelievable.
All we can do is sit back and admire in awe and wonder.
His Son's birthday is all the more wonder to celebrate His coming to us...mere "us."
"I alway wondered why they call it the Milky Way."
Seriously? OK, but some more sensitive souls might want to look away.
A goddess was breast-feeding her child, pulled the child away from her breast and the milk shot out and made the stars.
Think about that next time you treat someone to a candy bar.
I first saw M31 when I was a teen. I have been watching it ever since, mostly in amazement that it is still visible even when stars dimmer than mag 4 are lost in the light pollution.
Which means you're looking at 12 million year old data. It might be obsolete. But then - what would that mean?
Norway - now there's some nice work.
I trust you had a Merry Christmas! Here's wishing you a Happy New Year! And thank you for the ping to the article.
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