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Space Science

As Hubble Breaks a Distance Record, We Learn Its True Limits 53

StartsWithABang writes: You might think that, when it comes to finding the most distant objects in the Universe, all we need is a good telescope, to leave the shutter open, and wait. As we accumulate more and more photons, we're bound to find the most distant, faint objects out there. Sure, Hubble just broke its own cosmic distance record, but it's certainly not the most distant. Thinking so misses an important fact: the Universe is expanding! And with that expansion, the wavelength of the light we can see gets redshifted. Ultraviolet light winds up in the infrared, infrared light winds up in the microwave, and the most distant galaxies that are out there are invisible, even to Hubble. Here are Hubble's limits, and how the James Webb Space Telescope will overcome them.
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As Hubble Breaks a Distance Record, We Learn Its True Limits

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  • As often happens, my RSS feed display chopped off the end of the headline, and my overactive imagination supplied a much more interesting conclusion:

    As Hubble Breaks a Distance Record, We Learn Its True ...

    Purpose.

    It's a radio... for talking to God!

    • by Headw1nd ( 829599 ) on Wednesday May 06, 2015 @06:58AM (#49627851)
      Unfortunately for us, the God in question turns out to be Azathoth.
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by AikonMGB ( 1013995 )

      Purpose.

      It's a radio... for talking to God!

      What does God need with a radio?!

      • Purpose.

        It's a radio... for talking to God!

        What does God need with a radio?!

        Or money, from weekly tithes, for that matter...

        • Because putting fist sized gold nuggets in the flower gardens of the churches hasn't worked out so well.

          • hush you, plundering church gardens for those has been working out GREAT for me. what the churchgoers don't know, won't hurt them

      • Purpose.

        It's a radio... for talking to God!

        What does God need with a radio?!

        see Ancient Aliens theory...

  • Any science article that insists on shouting at me... sucks. I HATE HATE HATE this writer.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Because using capitals to indicate an exclaimation rather than an exclaimation point makes you look more intelligent?

    • Please quit shooting all caps are worse than of what you are complaining, unless they have four in a row in which case fuck that guy there is never an excuse for four exclamation points

      (briefly skims blogpost)

      nope only one used at a time

  • What were you thinking, putting an autoplaying video on the front page????

    • by cobbaut ( 232092 )

      What were you thinking, putting an autoplaying video on the front page????

      (Sorry for going offtopic)
      Strange that video's never autoplay on my computer. Maybe you should install adblock+, ghostery, muter, ... or something.

      • What were you thinking, putting an autoplaying video on the front page????

        (Sorry for going offtopic) Strange that video's never autoplay on my computer. Maybe you should install adblock+, ghostery, muter, ... or something.

        Yes, because everyone reads slashdot on their infinitely customisable home computer, and not at work.

  • No offense to the awesomeness that is Hubble, but isn't it logical for it to break distance records on a regular basis as more "old" light reaches it simply as a function of time?

    • Re:Logical (Score:5, Informative)

      by Sique ( 173459 ) on Wednesday May 06, 2015 @05:11AM (#49627557) Homepage
      I guess you stumbled on a logical error (and you didn't read the article). 1. Very old light reaches us all the time, not just since the start of the Hubble. Thus light from very far away objects has hit Hubble from the beginning, but we weren't able yet to identify it. So there is a function of time, but it has more to do with our increasing ability to make sense of Hubble data. 2. The article talks mainly about the limits of Hubble. As it has a limited mirror area, the amount of light it can collect is limited. Objects farther away have to be brighter to be visible with Hubble. 3. Hubble works only with light that can be reflected by its mirror. The longest wavelength it can detect is 1 micron. As light that comes from far away is redshifted, its wavelength increases. Usually we use the Lyman series of absorbtion lines of Hydrogenium to measure the redshift. As soon as the shortest wavelength of the Lyman series is redshifted to a wavelength of more than 1 micron, we can't see it anymore in Hubble. Thus the farthest object of which we can estimate the distance with Hubble can't be farther away than the redshift of the Lyman series to 1 micron allows. Yes, also X ray can be redshifted to UV and to visible light, which then could be detected by Hubble, but we can't measure the redshift (yet), because we don't know how to identify the absorbtion lines that exists in X rays.
      • What's absorbing in the x-ray region? Certainly not hydrogen, taking a 1s to free would not absorb that much energy.

    • That's only if our telescopes could reach the Hubble Sphere. That way light speed + space expansion would be our distance limit and only time would allow us to see objects between the Hubble Sphere and the Cosmic Space Horizon.

      But so far with our best equipment we are barely reaching a third of this distance and our limits are still of technological nature - or more accurately of economical nature (we *know* how to build better telescopes that would reach farther, but we don't have the budget).

  • Note TFA has a redshift(z) scale that is backwards. They have z=1 at 6 billion years, and z>20 at 200 million years.

    • by necro81 ( 917438 )

      Note TFA has a redshift(z) scale that is backwards. They have z=1 at 6 billion years, and z>20 at 200 million years.

      I puzzled over that for a moment, too. What the time scale shows is age of the universe, or (as the scale is labeled) years since the Big Bang. So z>20 = universe at 200 million years old, not years ago. It's confounding and, to my eyes, counterintuitive, but perhaps that's how cosmologists work.

      • Yes, this is how we work :)

        I've heard it joked that this is the difference between astronomers and physicists. Astronomers put the observer at the 0-point of the coordinate system, hence larger redshifts are further away. On the other hand, physicists put the 0-point at the "beginning" of the universe: the initial conditions, and mark time after that.
  • an important fact! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Guildor ( 4089009 )
    "an important fact: the Universe is expanding!" : Actually, this is not known, only theorized. It's based on the notion that red-shift / blue-shift relate to distance. But that's never been proven, and there are others out there that think it isn't about motion at all. Although we have a consensus opinion that uses it as fact, it isn't a proven fact.
    • by cyn1c77 ( 928549 )

      "an important fact: the Universe is expanding!" : Actually, this is not known, only theorized. It's based on the notion that red-shift / blue-shift relate to distance. But that's never been proven, and there are others out there that think it isn't about motion at all. Although we have a consensus opinion that uses it as fact, it isn't a proven fact.

      Why is the parent modded down when the post is correct and politely stated?

      In my opinion, this is one of the biggest secrets (hidden in plain sight) present in astronomy today. It's highly relevant to every article about space outside our galaxy yet I have never seen an unbiased article in layman's terms discussing the implications of the ubiquitus redshift-distance relation being wrong.

      Maybe we have too many professional astronomers with mod points?

      • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 06, 2015 @10:18AM (#49629189)

        Why is the parent modded down when the post is correct and politely stated?

        The GP, at this time, is not modded down. The GP has a history of down modded posts causing bad karma and a low score on new posts.

        And looking at the GP's history, this seems to be one of the few times where the post mentions red shift in open-endedly, instead of proposing the idea that red shift is caused by different star ages, something that runs completely against basic physics of how red shift works in both observation and the lab.

        It's highly relevant to every article about space outside our galaxy

        Red shift is not the only distance measure outside of our galaxy. Stories, even on Slashdot, have discussed subtle changes to those other distance measurements and the impact it has on Hubble's law. And while it is relevant to every article, shouldn't be expected to be in every such article, just as not every article that mentions Newtonian mechanics isn't going to discuss the limitations of using an approximation to relativity.

        Maybe we have too many professional astronomers with mod points?

        Considering how often the first people to post something using large words around here get modded up, even if failing at intro level astronomy stuff, or how people get modded up for dismissing astronomy theories with no actual basis or content in their post, I don't think it is astronomers with mod points we have to worry about.

  • Maybe they should ask CSI for some help. Those guys have tech that can magnify any image to infinity.

  • Wow. Instead of StartsWithABang's usual EndsEveryOtherSentenceWithABang, it's down to EndsEveryThirdParagraphWithABang. Progress!

We are each entitled to our own opinion, but no one is entitled to his own facts. -- Patrick Moynihan

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