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Glimpse at Early Universe Reveals Surprisingly Mature Galaxies (Forwarded)
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July 28th 04, 01:47 AM
Andrew Yee
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Glimpse at Early Universe Reveals Surprisingly Mature Galaxies (Forwarded)
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EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE ON WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, AT 1 P.M. EDT
Glimpse at Early Universe Reveals Surprisingly Mature Galaxies
Observations challenge standing view of how and when galaxies formed
A rare glimpse back in time into the universe's early evolution has revealed
something startling: mature, fully formed galaxies where scientists expected to
discover little more than infants.
"Up until now, we assumed that galaxies were just beginning to form between 8
and 11 billion years ago, but what we found suggests that that is not the case,"
said Karl Glazebrook, associate professor of physics and astronomy in the
Krieger School of Arts and Sciences at The Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore
and co-principal author of a paper in the July 8 issue of Nature. "It seems that
an unexpectedly large fraction of stars in big galaxies were already in place
early in the universe's formation, and that challenges what we've believed. We
thought massive galaxies came much later."
Using the Frederick C. Gillett Gemini North Telescope in Mauna Kea, Hawaii,
Glazebrook and a multinational team of researchers called the Gemini Deep Deep
Survey (GDDS) employed a special technique called the "Nod and Shuffle" to peer
into what had traditionally been a cosmological blind spot. Called "the Redshift
Desert," this era -- 8 billion to 11 billion years ago, when the universe was
only 3 billion to 6 billion years old -- has remained relatively unexplored
until now, mainly because of the challenges inherent in collecting data from the
faintest galactic light ever to be dissected into the rainbow of colors called a
spectrum. In all, the team collected and analyzed spectra from 300 galaxies,
making it the most complete sample ever taken from the Redshift Desert.
"This was the most comprehensive survey ever done covering the bulk of the
galaxies that represent conditions in the early universe," Glazebrook said. "We
expected to find basically zero massive galaxies beyond about 9 billion years
ago, because theoretical models predict that massive galaxies form last.
Instead, we found highly developed galaxies that just shouldn't have been there,
but are."
These findings challenge the dominant theory of galactic evolution, which posits
that at this early stage, galaxies should have formed from the bottom up, with
small pieces crashing together to build small and then ever larger galaxies.
Called the "hierarchical model," this scenario predicts that normal-to-large
galaxies such as those studied by GDDS would not yet exist.
"There are obviously some aspects of the early lives of galaxies that we don't
yet completely understand, Glazebrook said. "We do find fewer massive galaxies
in the past, but there are still more than we expected. This result is giving us
a big clue as to how stars form from invisible gas in the hierarchical model,
which is something not well understood under current theories. Some new
ingredient is required to make more stars form earlier in the big galaxies. But
what that ingredient is, we don't yet know."
The GDDS team, which included Nature paper co-authors Roberto Abraham from the
University of Toronto, Patrick McCarthy from the Observatories of the Carnegie
Institution of Washington and David Crampton of the National Research Council of
Canada's Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics, was supported by a grant from the
Packard Foundation and by institutional support from the National Science
Foundation, Canada's National Research Council, the Natural Sciences and
Engineering Research Council of Canada and the United Kingdom's Particle Physics
and Research Council, among others.
Andrew Yee
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