There may be far fewer galaxies further out in the universe then might be expected, according to a new study led by MSU.
Credit: Photo courtesy of NASA/CXC/STSci/DSS/Magellan
There may be far fewer galaxies further out
in the universe then might be expected, according to a new study led by
Michigan State University.
Over the years, the Hubble Space Telescope has allowed astronomers to
look deep into the universe. The long view stirred theories of untold
thousands of distant, faint galaxies. The new research, appearing in the
current issue of the Astrophysical Journal Letters, however, offers a theory that reduces the estimated number of the most distant galaxies by 10 to 100 times.
"Our work suggests that there are far fewer faint galaxies than we
once previously thought," said Brian O'Shea, MSU associate professor of
physics and astronomy. "Earlier estimates placed the number of faint
galaxies in the early universe to be hundreds or thousands of times
larger than the few bright galaxies that we can actually see with the
Hubble Space Telescope. We now think that number could be closer to ten
times larger.
O'Shea and his team used the National Science Foundation's Blue
Waters supercomputer to run simulations to examine the formation of
galaxies in the early universe. The team simulated thousands of galaxies
at a time, including the galaxies' interactions through gravity or
radiation.
The simulated galaxies were consistent with observed distant galaxies
at the bright end of the distribution -- in other words, those that
have been discovered and confirmed. The simulations didn't, however,
reveal an exponentially growing number of faint galaxies, as has been
previously predicted. The number of those at the lower end of the
brightness distribution was flat rather than increasing sharply, O'Shea
added.
These simulations will be tested further when the much-anticipated
James Webb Space Telescope comes online in late 2018. The improved
technology will afford astronomers even more-detailed views of space
than the amazing images that the Hubble has produced in recent years.
The Hubble Space Telescope can see the tip of the iceberg of the
most-distant galaxies, said Michael Norman, co-author of the paper and
director of the San Diego Supercomputer Center at the University of
California, San Diego.
While the James Webb telescope will improve views of distant
galaxies, the telescope has a relatively small field of view. As a
result, the observations must take into account cosmic variance -- the
statistical variation in the number of galaxies from place to place.
That's what makes these simulations pertinent even as improved technology becomes available, O'Shea said.
"A deeper understanding based on theory may be necessary to correctly
interpret what's being seen, such as high redshift survey results," he
said.
In addition to O'Shea and Norman, the research team also included
John Wise, an assistant professor at the Georgia Institute of
Technology, and Hao Xu, a postdoctoral research associate at the
University of California, San Diego.
The research was funded by the National Science Foundation and NASA.
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