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New Haven, Conn. — A team of astronomers looking at the universe’s
distant past found nine young, unusually compact galaxies, each weighing
in at 200 billion times the mass of the Sun. The findings appeared in the
April 10 issue of The Astrophysical Journal Letters.
These young galaxies are the equivalent of a human baby that is 20
inches long, yet weighs 180 pounds.
“Seeing the compact sizes of these galaxies is a puzzle,” said
Pieter G. van Dokkum of Yale, who led the study. “No massive galaxy at
this distance has ever been observed to be so compact, and it is not yet
clear how one of these would build itself up to be the size of the
galaxies we see today.”
The galaxies, each only 5,000 light-years across, are a fraction of the
size of today's “grownup” galaxies but contain approximately the same
number of stars. Each could fit inside the central hub of the Milky Way.
“These ultra-dense galaxies, forming the building blocks of today's
largest galaxies, might comprise half of all galaxies of that mass at this
early time,” van Dokkum said.
But, van Dokkum noted that they would have to change a lot over 11
billion years — they would have to grow five times bigger, “While they
could get larger by colliding with other galaxies, such collisions may not
be the complete answer,” he said.
Astronomers used NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and the W.M. Keck
Observatory on Mauna Kea, Hawaii, to study the galaxies whose light has
been traveling toward us for 11 billion years. “What we see now is the way
these compact galaxies existed 11 billion years ago, when the universe was
less than 3 billion years old,” van Dokkum explained. “Only Hubble and
Keck can see the sizes of these galaxies because they are very small and
far away.”
In 2006, the research team also studied the galaxies with the Gemini
South Telescope Near-Infrared Spectrograph, on Cerro Pachon in the Chilean
Andes. Those observations provided the galaxies’ distances and showed that
the stars are a half a billion to a billion years old, and that the most
massive stars had already exploded as supernovae.
“In the Hubble Deep Field, astronomers found that star-forming galaxies
are small,” said Marijn Franx of Leiden University, The Netherlands.
“However, these galaxies were also very low in mass. They weigh much less
than our Milky Way. Our study, which surveyed a much larger area than in
the Hubble Deep Field, surprisingly shows that galaxies with the same
weight as our Milky Way were also very small in the past. All galaxies
look really different in early times, even massive ones that formed their
stars early.”
Van Dokkum speculated on how these small, crowded galaxies formed. He
said, one way could have involved an interaction in the emerging universe
between hydrogen gas and dark matter — an invisible form of matter that
accounts for most of the universe's mass. Shortly after the Big Bang, the
universe contained an uneven landscape of dark matter. He said that
hydrogen gas could have been trapped in puddles of the invisible material
which began spinning rapidly in dark matter's gravitational whirlpool,
forming stars at a furious rate.
The astronomers estimated that the stars in the compact galaxies are
spinning around their galactic disks at roughly 1 million miles an hour
(500 kilometers a second). Stars in today's galaxies, by contrast, are
traveling at about half that speed because they are larger and rotate more
slowly.
These galaxies are ideal targets for the Wide Field Camera 3, which is
scheduled to be installed aboard Hubble during Servicing Mission 4 in the
fall of 2008. The team says that the new images should lead to a better
understanding of the evolution of galaxies early in the life of the
universe.
The authors of the paper are Pieter van Dokkum (Yale University),
Marijn Franx (Leiden University, The Netherlands), Mariska Kriek
(Princeton University), Bradford Holden, Garth Illingworth, Daniel Magee,
and Rychard Bouwens (University of California, Santa Cruz and Lick
Observatory), Danilo Marchesini (Yale University), Ryan Quadri (Leiden
University), Greg Rudnick (National Optical Astronomical Observatory,
Tucson), Edward Taylor (Leiden University), and Sune Toft (European
Southern Observatory, Germany).
Images and more information on the compact galaxies are available on
line at
http://hubblesite.org/news/2008/15 .
The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation
between NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) and is managed by NASA's
Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) in Greenbelt, Md. The Space Telescope
Science Institute (STScI) conducts Hubble science operations. The
institute is operated for NASA by the Association of Universities for
Research in Astronomy, Inc., Washington, DC.
Citation: The Astrophysical Journal Letters 677:L5–L8 (April 10, 2008).
Pieter van Dokkum
http://www.astro.yale.edu/cgi-bin/dept/people/user.cgi?dokkum
Astronomy http://www.astro.yale.edu/
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