University of California, Riverside
astronomers1 Bahram Mobasher and Naveen Reddy are members of a team that has discovered the most distant
galaxy2 ever found. The galaxy is seen as it was just 700 million years after the Big Bang, when the universe was only about 5 percent of its current age of 13.8 billion years. Results appears in the Oct. 24 issue of the journal Nature.
In
collaboration3 with astronomers at the University of Texas at Austin, Texas A & M University, and the National Optical Astronomy
Observatories4, Mobasher and Reddy identified a very distant galaxy candidate using deep optical and
infrared5 images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope. Follow-up observations of this galaxy by the Keck Telescope in Hawai'i confirmed its distance.
In searching for distant
galaxies6, the team selected several candidates, based on their colors, from the approximately 100,000 galaxies identified in the Hubble Space Telescope images taken as a part of the CANDELS survey, the largest project ever performed by the Hubble Space Telescope, with a total
allocated7(分配的) time of roughly 900 hours. However, using colors to sort galaxies is
tricky8 because some nearby objects can
masquerade(乔装) as distant galaxies.
Therefore, to measure the distance to these galaxies in a
definitive9 way, astronomers use spectroscopy -- specifically, how much the
wavelength10 of a galaxy's light has shifted towards the red-end of the
spectrum11 as it travels from the galaxy to Earth, due to the expansion of the universe. This phenomenon is called "redshift." Since the expansion
velocity12 (redshift) and distances of galaxies are proportional, the redshift gives astronomers a measure of the distance to galaxies.
"What makes this galaxy unique, compared to other such discoveries, is the spectroscopic
confirmation13 of its distance," said Mobasher, a professor of physics and observational astronomy.
Mobasher explained that because light travels at about 186,000 miles per second, when we look at distant objects, we see them as they appeared in the past. The more distant we push these observations, the farther into the past we can see.
"By observing a galaxy that far back in time, we can study the earliest formation of galaxies," he said. "By comparing properties of galaxies at different distances, we can explore the evolution of galaxies throughout the age of the universe."
The discovery was made possible by a new instrument, MOSFIRE, commissioned on the Keck Telescope. Not only is the instrument extremely sensitive, but it is designed to detect infrared light -- a region of the spectrum to where the wavelength of light emitted from distant galaxies is shifted -- and could target multiple objects at a time. It was the latter feature that allowed the researchers to observe 43 galaxy candidates in only two nights at Keck, and obtain higher quality observations than previous studies.