Earliest-known galaxy offers clues about the primordial universe
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[April 08, 2022]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Astronomers have
discovered what may be the earliest and most distant galaxy ever
observed, one that formed relatively soon after the Big Bang event that
marked the origin of the universe and may be populated by the novel
first generation of stars.
The galaxy, called HD1, dates from a bit more than 300 million years
after the Big Bang that occurred about 13.8 billion years ago,
researchers said on Thursday. The observations suggest HD1 formed stars
at a staggering rate - perhaps about 100 new stars annually - or instead
harbored what would be the earliest-known supermassive black hole, they
added.
Because of how long light takes to travel immense distances - 5.9
trillion miles (9.5 trillion km) in a year - observing objects such as
HD1 amounts to peering back in time. If the data is confirmed by future
observations, HD1 would supplant one called GN-z11 as the earliest-known
galaxy by about 100 million years. HD1 would be considered the earliest
and furthest known astronomical entity.
The researchers used data from telescopes in Hawaii and Chile and the
orbiting Spitzer Space Telescope. They hope to obtain more clarity using
the James Webb Space Telescope, due to become operational within months
after being launched by NASA in December.
"Observational information on HD1 is limited and other physical
properties remain a mystery including its shape, total mass and
metallicity," said University of Tokyo astrophysicist Yuichi Harikane,
lead author of research detailing the discovery published in the
Astrophysical Journal.
Metallicity refers to the proportion of material other than the gases
hydrogen and helium that were present in the primordial universe.
"The difficulty is that this is almost the limit of the capabilities of
current telescopes in terms of both sensitivity and wavelength,"
Harikane added.
Galaxies are vast assemblages of stars and interstellar matter bound by
gravitational attraction, like the Milky Way in which our solar system
resides. The first galaxies, arising 100 million to 150 million years
after the Big Bang, were less massive and denser than those existing
today, with many fewer stars.
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The distant early galaxy HD1, object in red, is shown at the center
of this undated zoom-in handout image. The galaxy, if confirmed by
future observations, would be the earliest and most distant known
astronomical object. Harikane et al/Handout via REUTERS
The researchers said HD1, with a
mass perhaps 10 billion times greater than our sun, may have been
populated with the very first generation of stars. These so-called
Population III stars are hypothesized as extremely massive,
luminous, hot and short-lived, composed almost exclusively of
hydrogen and helium.
"After the Big Bang, some regions in space ended up
being denser than others, and this attracted progressively more
matter. This effect created large concentrations of gas, some of
which collapsed to form stars," said astrophysicist Fabio Pacucci of
the Center for Astrophysics-Harvard & Smithsonian, lead author of a
related study in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal
Astronomical Society Letters.
Elements heavier than hydrogen and helium were absent in the
universe's initial stages, forged later inside the earliest stars
and then spewed into interstellar space when they exploded at the
ends of their life cycles.
HD1 was observed to possess extreme ultraviolet luminosity.
Population III stars could emit more UV light than ordinary stars,
with HD1 possibly "undergoing a very abrupt starburst," Pacucci
said.
An alternative explanation for the UV luminosity could be a
supermassive black hole about 100 million times more massive than
our sun situated inside HD1, Pacucci added. Many galaxies including
the Milky Way hold supermassive black holes at their centers. Until
now, the earliest-known one of these was dated to about 700 million
years after the Big Bang.
The earliest stars and galaxies paved the way for those existing
today.
"The first galaxies ... were a millionth of the mass of the Milky
Way and much denser. One way to think of them is as the building
blocks in the construction project of present-day galaxies, like our
own Milky Way," Harvard University theoretical physicist and study
co-author Avi Loeb said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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