Using ALMA, astronomers surveyed an array of
normal galaxies seen when the Universe was only 1 billion years old.
They detected the glow of ionized carbon filling the space between the
stars, indicating these galaxies were fully formed but chemically
immature, when compared to similar galaxies a few billion years later.
The ALMA data for four of these galaxies is show in relation to objects
in the COSMOS field taken with the Hubble Space Telescope.
Credit: ALMA (NRAO/ESO/NAOJ), P. Capak; B. Saxton (NRAO/AUI/NSF), NASA/ESA Hubble
On its own, dust seems fairly unremarkable.
However, by observing the clouds of gas and dust within a galaxy,
astronomers can determine important information about the history of
star formation and the evolution of galaxies. Now thanks to the
unprecedented sensitivity of the telescope at the Atacama Large
Millimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile, a Caltech-led team has been able to
observe the dust contents of galaxies as seen just 1 billion years after
the Big Bang--a time period known as redshift 5-6. These are the
earliest average-sized galaxies to ever be directly observed and
characterized in this way.
The work is published in the June 25 edition of the journal Nature.
Dust in galaxies is created by the elements released during the
formation and collapse of stars. Although the most abundant elements in
the universe--hydrogen and helium--were created by the Big Bang, stars
are responsible for making all of the heavier elements in the universe,
such as carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, and iron. And because young, distant
galaxies have had less time to make stars, these galaxies should contain
less dust. Previous observations had suggested this, but until now
nobody could directly measure the dust in these faraway galaxies.
"Before we started this study, we knew that stars formed out of these
clouds of gas and dust, and we knew that star formation was probably
somehow different in the early universe, where dust is likely less
common. But the previous information only really hinted that the
properties of the gas and the dust in earlier galaxies were different
than in galaxies we see around us today. We wanted to find data that
showed that," says Peter Capak, a staff scientist at the Infrared
Processing and Analysis Center (IPAC) at Caltech and the first author of
the study.
Armed with the high sensitivity of ALMA, Capak and his colleagues set
out to perform a direct analysis of the dust in these very early
galaxies.
Young, faraway galaxies are often difficult to observe because they
appear very dim from Earth. Previous observations of these young
galaxies, which formed just 1 billion years after the Big Bang, were
made with the Hubble Space Telescope and the W. M. Keck
Observatory--both of which detect light in the near-infrared and visible
bands of the electromagnetic spectrum. The color of these galaxies at
these wavelengths can be used to make inferences about the dust--for
example, galaxies that appear bluer in color tend to have less dust,
while those that are red have more dust. However, other effects like the
age of the stars and our distance from the galaxy can mimic the effects
of dust, making it difficult to understand exactly what the color
means.
The researchers began their observations by first analyzing these
early galaxies with the Keck Observatory. Keck confirmed the distance
from the galaxies as redshift greater than 5--verifying that the
galaxies were at least as young as they previously had been thought to
be. The researchers then observed the same galaxies using ALMA to detect
light at the longer millimeter and submillimeter wavelengths of light.
The ALMA readings provided a wealth of information that could not be
seen with visible-light telescopes, including details about the dust and
gas content of these very early galaxies.
Capak and his colleagues were able to use ALMA to--for the first
time--directly view the dust and gas clouds of nine average-sized
galaxies during this epoch. Specifically, they focused on a feature
called the carbon II spectral line, which comes from carbon atoms in the
gas around newly formed stars. The carbon line itself traces this gas,
while the data collected around the carbon line traces a so-called
continuum emission, which provides a measurement of the dust. The
researchers knew that the carbon line was bright enough to be seen in
mature, dust-filled nearby galaxies, so they reasoned that the line
would be even brighter if there was indeed less dust in the young
faraway galaxies.
Using the carbon line, their results confirmed what had previously
been suggested by the data from Hubble and Keck: these older galaxies
contained, on average, 12 times less dust than galaxies from 2 billion
years later (at a redshift of approximately 4).
"In galaxies like our Milky Way or nearby Andromeda, all of the stars
form in very dusty environments, so more than half of the light that is
observed from young stars is absorbed by the dust," Capak says. "But in
these faraway galaxies we observed with ALMA, less than 20 percent of
the light is being absorbed. In the local universe, only very young
galaxies and very odd ones look like that. So what we're showing is that
the normal galaxy at these very high redshifts doesn't look like the
normal galaxy today. Clearly there is something different going on."
That "something different" gives astronomers like Capak a peek into
the lifecycle of galaxies. Galaxies form because gas and dust are
present and eventually turn into stars--which then die, creating even
more gas and dust, and releasing energy. Because it is impossible to
watch this evolution from young galaxy to old galaxy happen in real time
on the scale of a human lifespan, the researchers use telescopes like
ALMA to take a survey of galaxies at different evolutionary stages.
Capak and his colleagues believe that this lack of dust in early
galaxies signifies a never-before-seen evolutionary stage for galaxies.
"This result is really exciting. It's the first time that we're
seeing the gas that the stars are forming out of in the early universe.
We are starting to see the transition from just gas to the first
generation of galaxies to more mature systems like those around us
today. Furthermore, because the carbon line is so bright, we can now
easily find even more distant galaxies that formed even longer ago,
sooner after the Big Bang," Capak says.
Lin Yan, a staff scientist at IPAC and coauthor on the paper, says
that their results are also especially important because they represent
typical early galaxies. "Galaxies come in different sizes. Earlier
observations could only spot the largest or the brightest galaxies, and
those tend to be very special--they actually appear very rarely in the
population," she says. "Our findings tell you something about a typical
galaxy in that early epoch, so they're results can be observed as a
whole, not just as special cases."
Yan says that their ability to analyze the properties of these and
earlier galaxies will only expand with ALMA's newly completed
capabilities. During the study, ALMA was operating with only a portion
of its antennas, 20 at the time; the capabilities to see and analyze
distant galaxies will be further improved now that the array is complete
with 66 antennas, Yan adds.
"This is just an initial observation, and we've only just started to
peek into this really distant universe at redshift of a little over 5.
An astronomer's dream is basically to go as far distant as we can. And
when it's complete, we should be able to see all the distant galaxies
that we've only ever dreamed of seeing," she says.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
California Institute of Technology. The original item was written by Jessica Stoller-Conrad.
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