|  |  | 
 | 
| Hubble finds a new contender for galaxy distance record26 Jan 2011Pushing the Hubble Space Telescope to the limit of  its technical ability, an international collaboration of astronomers  have found what is likely to be the most distant and ancient galaxy ever  seen, whose light has taken 13.2 billion years to reach us (a redshift  of around 10).
 Astronomers have pushed the NASA/ESA Hubble Space  Telescope to its limits by finding what is plausibly the most distant  and ancient object in the Universe [1] ever seen. Its light has  travelled for 13.2 billion years to reach Hubble [2], which corresponds  to a redshift around 10. The age of the Universe is 13.7 billion years.
 
 
 
The dim object, called UDFj-39546284, is likely to be a compact  galaxy of blue stars that existed 480 million years after the Big Bang,  only four per cent of the Universe's current age. It is tiny. Over one  hundred such mini-galaxies would be needed to make up our own galaxy,  the Milky Way. |  |   | The galaxy UDFj-39546284 may be the most distant,  ancient object in the Universe. It appears as a faint red blob in this  ultra deep field exposure taken with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space  Telescope. Copyright: NASA, ESA, G. Illingworth (University of  California, Santa Cruz), R. Bouwens (University of California, Santa  Cruz, and Leiden University) and the HUDF09 Team
 |  This galaxy would be more distant than the population of redshift 8  galaxies recently discovered in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, including  the current most distant spectroscopically confirmed [3] record holder  at a redshift of 8.6, and the redshift 8.2 gamma-ray burst from 2009. A  redshift of z = 8.6 means that the object is seen as it was around 600  million years after the Big Bang.
 "We're seeing huge changes in the rate of star birth that tell us  that if we go a little further back in time we're going to see even  more dramatic changes," says Garth Illingworth of the University of California at Santa Cruz.
 The astronomers were surprised, as this new result suggests that the  rate at which galaxies were forming stars grew precipitously, increasing  by a factor of ten over the 170 million years that elapsed between the  era of this newly discovered candidate galaxy and that of the population  of previously identified galaxies at a redshift around 8 (650 million  years after the Big Bang).
 "These observations provide us with our best insights yet into  the likely nature of the earlier generation of primeval objects that we  are yet to find," adds Rychard Bouwens of Leiden University in the Netherlands.
 Astronomers don't know exactly when the first stars appeared in the  Universe, but every step further from Earth takes them deeper into the  early Universe's formative years when stars and galaxies were just  beginning to emerge in the aftermath of the Big Bang [4].
 "We're moving into a regime where there are big changes afoot.  Another couple of hundred million years back towards the Big Bang, and  that will be the time when the first galaxies really are starting to  build up," says Illingworth.
 Bouwens and Illingworth are reporting the discovery in the 27 January issue of the British science journal Nature.
 The even more distant proto-galaxies that the team expects are out  there will require the infrared vision of the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb  Space Telescope (JWST), which is the successor to Hubble. Planned for  launch later this decade, JWST will provide the spectroscopic  measurements that will confirm today's report of the object's tremendous  distance.
 A year of detailed analysis was required before the object was  identified in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field - Infrared (HUDF-IR) data  taken in the late summers of 2009 and 2010. The object appears as a  faint dot of starlight in the Hubble exposures, and although its  individual stars canft be resolved by Hubble, the evidence suggests that  this is a compact galaxy of hot stars that first started to form over  100-200 million years earlier, from gas trapped in a pocket of dark  matter.
 The proto-galaxy is only visible at the longest infrared wavelengths  observable by Hubble. This means that the expansion of the Universe has  stretched and thereby reddened its light more than that of any other  galaxy previously identified in the HUDF-IR, taking it to the very limit  that Hubble can detect. JWST will go deeper into infrared wavelengths  and will be at least an order of magnitude more sensitive than Hubble,  allowing it to hunt more efficiently for primeval galaxies at even  greater distances, at earlier times, closer to the Big Bang.
 
 Notes for editorsThe Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between ESA and NASA.[1] The international team of astronomers in this study consists of  R. J. Bouwens (Leiden University and University of California, Santa  Cruz), G. D. Illingworth (University of California, Santa Cruz), I.  Labbe (Carnegie Observatories), P. A. Oesch (ETH Zurich), M. Trenti  (University of Colorado), C. M. Carollo (ETH Zurich), P. G. van Dokkum  (Yale University), M. Franx (Leiden University), M. Stiavelli (Space  Telescope Science Institute), V. González (University of California,  Santa Cruz), D. Magee (University of California, Santa Crux) and L.  Bradley (Space Telescope Science Institute)
 [2] Astronomers plumb the depths of the Universe, and probe its  history, by measuring how much the light from an object has been  stretched by the expansion of space. This is called the redshift value  or z. In general, the greater the observed z value for a galaxy, the  more distant it is in time and space, as observed from our position in  the Milky Way. Before Hubble was launched, astronomers could only see  galaxies out to a z of approximately 1, corresponding to an era halfway  through the history of the Universe. The original Hubble Deep Field,  taken in 1995, leapfrogged to z = 4, or roughly 90 per cent of the way  back to the beginning of time. The Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS)  produced the Hubble Ultra Deep Field of 2004, pushing back the limit to z  ~ 6. ACS was installed on Hubble during Servicing Mission 3B in 2002.  Hubble's first infrared camera, the Near Infrared Camera and  Multi-Object Spectrometer reached out to z = 7. The Wide Field Camera 3  (WFC3) first took us back to z ~ 8, and has now plausibly penetrated  back for the first time to z = 10. The James Webb Space Telescope is  expected to extend this back to a z of approximately 15, 275 million  years after the Big Bang, and possibly beyond. The very first stars may  have formed between z's of 30 and 15.
 [3] Likely candidates for distant galaxies can be identified and have  their redshift estimated by carefully studying them in Hubble images  taken through a range of different filters. The galaxy will be visible  only in some of the filters. An estimate of the redshift can be deduced  from the colour of the last filter in which the object is detected (a  technique known as photometric redshift). However, redshifts can only be  confirmed through spectroscopic study, in which the light from a galaxy  is split into its constituent wavelengths for analysis. This newly  discovered candidate galaxy is too faint to be studied spectroscopically  by any telescope in operation today, but the forthcoming NASA/ESA/CSA  James Webb Space Telescope will be equipped to do so.
 [4] The hypothesised hierarchical growth of galaxies — from stellar  clumps to majestic spirals and ellipticals — didn't become evident until  the Hubble Space Telescope Deep Field exposures. The first 500 million  years of the Universe's existence, from a z of 1000 to 10 is now the  missing chapter in the story of the hierarchical growth of galaxies.  It's not clear how the Universe assembled structure out of a darkening,  cooling fireball of the Big Bang. As with a developing embryo,  astronomers know there must have been an early period of rapid changes  that would set the initial conditions which made the Universe of  galaxies what it is today.
 
 ContactsGarth Illingworth University of California, Santa Cruz, USATel: +1-831-459-2843
 Email: gdi
  ucolick.org Rychard BouwensLeiden University, Netherlands and University of California, Santa Cruz, USA
 Tel: +1-831-459-5276
 Email: bouwens
  ucolick.org Oli UsherHubble/ESA, Garching, Germany
 Tel: +49-89-3200-6855
 Email: ousher
  eso.org Ray Villard
 Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, USA
 Tel: +1-410-338-4514
 Email: villard
  stsci.edu |  |  | 
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario