Grand
ole man: The newly-discovered EGS-zs8-1 galaxy is the oldest one yet.
Astronomers have set a new
distance record by unveiling the farthest galaxy, which may be over 13 billion
years old.
An international team 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 percent of its present age, and discovered an exceptionally luminous galaxy,
EGS-zs8-1.
They 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 that
has ever been measured.
The galaxy 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.
Lead author of the study,
Pascal Oesch, said that it had already built more than 15 percent of the mass
of our own Milky Way today. 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, and
Pieter van Dokkum, second author of the study, said that only the largest
telescopes were powerful enough to reach to these celestial distances.
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 galaxies -- seen in the Spitzer
images -- originate 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.
The study is published
online in Astrophysical Journal Letters.
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