The 1st Generation of Stars 236
Andy_Howell writes "Astronomers may have found members of the first generation of stars in the universe. Using the Hubble Space Telescope and the Keck I telescope, they observed a faint red blob that had been magnified into a double image by a gravitational lens. The blob was found to be a cluster of stars 13.6 billion light years away, seen when the age of the universe was less than a billion years old. The clump appears to contain only about a million stars, and is less than a few million years old. It is thought that swarms of these clumps came together over the age of the universe to create the galaxies we see today."
cool (Score:1)
Re:cool (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Eep! (Score:2)
Cool! (Score:1)
Now for a serious question - what's with the red colour? If these stars were that new when they emitted this light, wouldn't they be bright blue?
Re:Cool! (Score:1)
Re:Cool! (Score:1)
Re: Red Shift (Score:1)
Re: Red Shift (Score:2, Informative)
Re: Red Shift (Score:3, Informative)
Think of yourself as being on the surface of an expanding baloon: relative to other objects that are close to you on the surface, you are moving very slowly. Relative to objects at the center of the baloon or halfway around the surface, you are moving a little faster (remember this is as the crow flies). Relative to objects clear on the other side of the baloon, you are moving the fastest of all.
On the scale of the universe, objects on the other side of the galaxy are moving extremely fast (relative to you). I'm not sure exactly how fast, but I remember reading somewhere that it is getting close to the speed of light (after all, they have had to cover a huge amount of space to get so far away). This is easily fast enough to have an affect on the wavelength of the light - even a small relative speed will have a small (but probably unmeasurable affect).
IANAAstroPhysicist, so whether this explains the visibly red shift (since scientific spectrographs are much more sensitive than our eyes ), I cannot say. Another explaination might be that the stars are young and therefore cool, but I couldn't say that for sure either.
Re: Red Shift (Score:2, Interesting)
Bingo! The article mentioned that this star cluster was found at a redshift of z=5.58 I believe. The formula of interest here is that
1+z=(Lamda_em - Lamda_ob)/Lamda_ob
This means that the light we observe from this star cluster is arriving at a bit less than a quarter of its original wavelength -- the red light seem in the picture was emitted as hard ultraviolet radiation from young massive stars! Yes, young stars are really hot.
If you think that's impressive, consider the quasars the Sloan Digital Sky Survey keeps finding out at z>6. We see them as faint red dots, but they are actually outshining entire galaxies, mostly in the form of hard X-rays. And then there's the cosmic microwave background, sitting out there at z~1300. That was once a sea of energetic photons, just slightly too cool to ionize all the hydrogen in the universe; now it is a 2.7 degree Kelvin hiss in your radio.
Executive summary: you'd better believe you can see cosmological redshifts.
Oh, and PS -- don't ever call it a "doppler shift", that really pisses off cosmologists (or at least the ones in my department). Doppler shifts are the result of objects moving toward/away from you emitting photons that are a different wavelength in your rest frame. In the case of cosmological redshifts, the objects in question are not only not moving away from us, but general relativity doesn't even have a concept of "relative velocities" on these scales. Instead, the photons are actually arriving with a different wavelength, because space expanded underneath them en route.
If you aren't sure there is a difference, try this thought experiment: an observer and an emitter are at relative rest in a static universe, when a photon is emitted. While the photon is in transit, the observer and emitter move farther apart, then come to rest again. The observer sees the photon at its original wavelength, since the motion occurred totally independantly of the photon. Now imagine that, while the photon was en route, the universe expands for a little while. The observer and emitter are in the same end state (i.e. farther apart and at relative rest), but the photon arrives with a reduced wavelength, because this time space expanded underneath the photon.
It's a real redshift, not cooling. (Score:2)
It turns out that there are certain spectral features (element emission/absorption lines) that occur at the same frequency no matter what temperature the object producing them is at. If this pattern of lines is shifted, you know that the colour is due to a real redshift and not a temperature difference.
I suppose that if something like Planck's constant was different at the time and location of the stars, that would also produce an emission line shift, but it's far more likely that the light has just been redshifted.
Re: Red Shift (Score:2)
I don't recall the actual length of visible light waves, but I think it's in non-microscopic units. At extreme distances, the expansion of the universe probably means our relative speed to those objects is extremely high. What we see as the red light may have started in the ultraviolet at the source . . .
Re: Red Shift (Score:2, Informative)
Re: Red Shift (Score:2)
Re:Cool! (Score:1)
More info can be found on the NGST Science Page [nasa.gov].
Re:Cool! (Score:1)
Re:Cool! (Score:1)
Re:Cool! -- why the red (Score:1)
Redshift would alter the base frequency as well, but the article mentions that it's due to the age of the stars.
The red color does not come from H-alpha (Score:3, Insightful)
It's probably the case that these are very hot stars with peak emission at blue or uv wavelengths. The reason for the red color is probably almost entirely due to the red shift of the objects, and possibly a small amount of interstellar dust (depending on how much intervening dust there is).
More often you see H-alpha emission from the gas clouds surrounding newly formed stars in star forming regions and such, it's somewhat rare (although not unheard of) to see strong hydrogen emission in a stellar atmosphere.
Re:Cool! (Score:2)
The other question is if we are peeking over into the backyard of the next universe over, where stars may be burning out. [smile]
but seriously, all of the stars of about the same age. and there is some red shift going on there.
But they may just be sufficiently small that they never reach bright blue. They may be just big enough to for the reactions to catch, without blowing them apart. and wind up being red.
Re:Cool! (Score:1)
To some extent that makes sense, but on the other hand it's rather rare for us to see most red dwarves. It's been theorized that the majority of the stars in the universe are probably red dwarves, but we just can't see them because they're so faint. Also, due to the fact that the larger a star is, the brighter it is and the faster it burns. Comparatively regular stars burn like a flash in the pan compared to red dwarves which burn (relatively) cool and many times longer than their larger counterparts (thus the number of red dwarves tends to accumulate over time). Well in any case I find it unlikely that light could travel that far, for that long, and actually be from a cluster of red dwarves - which I'm sure would be far to faint for us to detect. It is however possible that some of the very first red dwarves are still burning if I remember correctly.
Re:Cool! (Score:2, Informative)
the light we are now seeing; if you had looked
at the spectrum of the starlight back then
(because you were floating in space close to
the stars), it would have peaked in the
ultraviolet.
However, the light has travelled a long way
to reach us, and the universe has been expanding
since then. The redshift of these objects is
around z=5.58, which means that we observe photons
to have a wavelength (z+1) = 6.58 times longer
than their rest wavelength. The peak of the
spectrum has moved from the near UV to the near
infrared. Hence, the stars would appear red
if viewed by a person.
The pictures were formed by combining images
taken through several different filters with
HST. Each filter was in the visible range.
The astronomers who made the picture set the
Red plane of the image to correspond to the
picture taken in the reddest filter,
the Green plane to the filter of intermediate
wavelength, and the Blue plane to the bluest
filter. It's false color, but reasonably
like a person would see.
Re:Cool! (Score:1)
I'm amazed (Score:2, Offtopic)
If you are interested there is a spectacular book entitled _The_Big_Bang_Never_Happened_ that describes an alternate (and far more rational) cosmology...it posits that the universe is ruled by elecromagnetically active plasmas, and that the behaviors of our universe need not be explained by increasingly unlikely constructions.
If this isn't a troll... (Score:1)
Re:I'm amazed (Score:1)
...
Re:I'm amazed (Score:1)
Re:I'm amazed (Score:3, Informative)
Sensational is more like it. I tried to get into it in the bookstore one time, but every time the author got up to the really juicy part where he was going to explain everything, he dropped his thread and referred me to a later chapter. Also, he was attacking mostly the exterior consequences of Big Bang theory, and as I recall he failed to really get to the main premises. I opted to put the book down. It looked like a crank to me.
Re:I'm amazed (Score:4, Informative)
The author is intellectually dishonest: at one point he is discussing some electromagnetics simulations that have a spiral galaxy-like appearance, and saying how those support his cosmological electromagnetism theory. What he doesn't tell you is that the images are *cross sections* of tubular structures, and that the field strengths needed to create those structures are *enormous*.
If that BOOK were posted to USENET it would be UTTERLY INDISTINGUISHABLE from the other PHYSICS CRANKS.
Re:I'm amazed (Score:1)
Re:I'm amazed (Score:1)
What does "far more rational" mean? In any case, the Big Bang theory has a lot going for it. It explains why space is expanding, it explains the relative abundance of elements in the universe, and it explains the 3K background radiation.
For any other theory to supplant the BB, it has to explain the data equally well. I haven't read the book you mentioned, but the active plasma idea sounds like BS to me.
Re:I'm amazed (Score:1, Funny)
So I'm ready to beleive in anything other than the big bang because, if I'm going to admit that I was off-track all of these years, at least I can take confort in thinking that those bigbang scientists were wrong too. With a new theory, we're all equal and starting anew, it's not like I'm 50 years behind the curve anymore.
Re:I'm amazed (Score:3, Informative)
Either the universe exists into the arbitrarily distant past or it has some kind of a start. I've never heard a good hypothesis for a beggining to the universe that doesn't involve some sort of a big bang. Which premise is that book trying to sell? That we always existed?, or that we started from something other than a big bang?
Re:I'm amazed (Score:1)
Re:I'm amazed (Score:1)
I remember that one. IIRC, one of its big arguments against the Big Bang was that the theories made no verifiable predictions. At about the same time I read those arguments I read the first stories about how the COBE experiment had detected the variations in the cosmic microwave background that inflationary theories had predicted.
Alternative Cosmology... (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with "The Big Bang Never Happened" (which I have read) and other alternative cosmologies is that they don't even attempt to go deep enough to prove their points. There's a reason for this. All of modern cosmology is based on General Relativity. If you are going to say that the Big Bang Never Happened, then your alternative cosmology has to not only come up with an alternative explanation for the Universe, but also explain everything that GR does without having a Big Bang. This is a very tall order.
It isn't enough to point out the contradictions in the standard model. It is also necessary to build a new model that explains all observations. To date, no one has been able to do this without having a Big Bang at the start.
Re:Alternative Cosmology... (Score:2)
We *know* that Newtonian physics is incorrect. It doesn't describe quantum mechanics or relativistic physics, *at all*, yet it is still used.
Where it does work, it's still useful. The same holds true with evolution or the big bang.
The big bang itself may be questioned, but the rest of the theories that imply the big bang *work* and will continue to work even if the big bang itself is wrong.
That being the case, we won't throw out General Relativity until a better model exists because GR does account for EM, QM, photonics, and most of everything else.
Even when we find a successor to GR, GUTS or whatever, GR will still be used in spot cases because as an approximation it is still good enough.
Re:Alternative Cosmology... (Score:2)
Really? where? has it been peer reviewed? is it incontravertible? is there more then one piece of evidence to support it? can the evidence be explained in other ways? This is facinating. What you are sying is that the entire curriculum of every high chool and collage is wrong. I am looking forward to reading about this could you please provide a link (preferably to a site not run by religous zealots or kooks).
The Oldest of the Old? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:The Oldest of the Old? (Score:2)
Wowsahhhs (Score:3, Funny)
U GOTS TO B KIDDING ME..........BRITNEY SPEARS IS LIKE THE FIRST AND BESTEST EVER ... THERE AINT NO STARS B4 HER IN MY BOOK!!!!!!!!!!!! I LUV BILLY!!!!!!!
how do they pick those out? (Score:1)
Re:how do they pick those out? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:how do they pick those out? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:how do they pick those out? (Score:2, Informative)
Old news - May 27, 2000 (Score:1)
-Berj
Oops - automatic destination description (Score:1)
-Berj
Age of the universe? (Score:4, Interesting)
Perhaps I've been out of touch with my astronomy studies for too long, I know there are a lot of discoveries being made. However I was under the impression that there was still a great deal of uncertainty about the age of the universe. It was generally agreed that it was somewhere between about 13 billion and 20 billion years old but exactly how old wasn't/isn't clear.
Is there something I don't know about or is this age prediction just an assumption? Have there been some consensus on this recently that I didn't hear about? Anyone know for sure? I'm always suspicious when I see "discoveries" like this whose results depend on something that hasn't been definitely proven.
Re:Age of the universe? (Score:1)
Re:Age of the universe? (Score:1)
Re:Age of the universe? (Score:2)
First of all, what makes you think they're all that sure?
Second, do you remember how science works? Collect evidence, formulate a theory, use the theory to suggest more evidence to look for, look for that evidence, lather, rinse, repeat. All you're seeing is the output of that cycle. Doesn't mean the answer is RIGHT, it just means that it's an answer that fits the evidence. Got a better answer that fits all the evidence? Bring it on!
Re:Age of the universe? (Score:5, Informative)
In any case, the number "13.6 billion light years" is relative to the actual age of the universe. What was measured was a redshift of 5.58. You can map that into a lookback time, but it depends on the cosmological parameters you assume. The beginning of the universe is at redshift infinity, which will give you another lookback time (ie. age of the universe) that depends on the cosmological parameters.
I don't know what particular cosmology was used to map z=5.58 to 13.6 billion years lookback time, but the STScI press release mentions that the cosmology they used gives an age of the universe of 14 billion years. It's probably a "concordance model" flat universe with 0.3 of the closure density coming from matter and the rest from the cosmological constant, with a Hubble constant around 65-70 km/s/Mpc.
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Re:Age of the universe? (Score:3, Informative)
An interesting thing about this discovery, if I'm reading it correctly, is it could be a good indicator of the universe's age. It correlates two different facts:
the spectra of the stars suggest that they are _uniformly_ extremely young. This makes it likely that they were all formed when the universe was very young.
the red shift of the cluster indicates it's 13.6 billion light-years away.
So, it's a sighting of an "event" that could only have happened in the early universe, and since the light from the event took 13.6 billion years to get here, it means the universe is just over 13.6 billion years old.
Now, mind you, this is not enough evidence to be certain about that leap, the "red shift" fact has a wide margin of error (since the constancy of Hubble's constant is now in question) and there may be situations where a cluster like this could occur in the universe much later than its early epoch, but it could reduce the wide gap in universe age measurements.
Hail hail astronomers (Score:1)
what the fuck is that (Score:2, Funny)
Re:what the fuck is that (Score:1)
Re:Hail hail astronomers (Score:2, Funny)
anyone got a link to a map of the universe? (Score:1)
james
Re:anyone got a link to a map of the universe? (Score:1)
AFAIK (I could be wrong), the radius of the observable universe is thought to be somewhere around 15-20 billion light years. So to answer your question, the reason it didn't pass us is that it hadn't gotten here yet.
Re:anyone got a link to a map of the universe? (Score:1)
As for the the actual "edge" of the universe, there are many theories of how it actually exists. Some say it _is_ like the Asteroids game, looping upon itself. Others say there is just a void after it which we can never get to because the edge retreats from us at the speed of light. And others say there is no edge, space is infinite.
Just curious. (Score:2, Troll)
If I were a director of federal astronomy I would enthusiastically fund near-galactic research that searched for wormholes, civilizations, planets that could support life, etc -- any kind of knowledge we need for a feasible star economy.
Basic science is nice, but erstwhile star captains probably wouldn't find the universe's origins very relevant.
Why Curisoty Based Research? (Score:4, Interesting)
Robert Moody from the Department Mathematical Sciences, University of Alberta illustrates the importance of curiosity based research in his paper [math.mun.ca] using lasers as an example of why curiosity based research is necessary.
Carl Sagan in his book, The Demon Haunted World, also stresses the importance of curiosity based research using James Clark Maxell's discoveries as an example of how it effects our lives today by providing the necessary building blocks for radio, television, computers, lasers, etc.
Basic science is nice, but erstwhile star captains probably wouldn't find the universe's origins very relevant.
It may not seem very relivant at first, but there are those who would argue in order to even begin to piece together data for a theory of everything (which may be vital to even approach the idea of star captains), we need to gather as much data as possible to reduce our error bars of knowledge.
All in all, Good question... I'm sure some of you have better answers...
Troll! (Score:2)
How is this possible? (Score:2)
How is this possible? When the universe was less than a billion years old, then any two particles in it would have to be within two billion light years of each other, assuming the "big bang" model is true. It could not take light from one of them 13.6 billion years to reach the other.
What's wrong with my reasoning?
Re:How is this possible? (Score:2)
A train leaves new york at 3:00 heading north...
Re:How is this possible? (Score:2)
No matter how fast they are moving away from each other, light still travels the same rate. Therefor the light should arrive in no more than two years.
In other words, if a car is moving away form you at near the speed of light, flashes its turn signal...
Re:How is this possible? (Score:3, Informative)
When the universe was two billion years old, no one object could receive information about anything farther than two billion light years away. But a billion years later, there is time for information to have come from objects that were originally outside of its light cone, but the light cone (in this case called a horizon, because it can't be seen beyond) has expanded beyond them.
[TMB]
Re:How is this possible? (Score:2)
Not quite. All observers will measure the same pulse of light as travelling at the same speed. That's not quite the same thing.
Re:How is this possible? (Score:2)
Re:How is this possible? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:How is this possible? (Score:1)
How is this possible?
The quotation is misleading/unclear. I believe what they are trying to say is that the blob is 13.6 billion light years away from us right now. They estimate that what was seen of the blob is from when the universe was less than a billion years old. (This implies the universe of today is less than 14.6 billion years old)
This also wouldn't violate relativity as one poster was concerned about.
Re:How is this possible? (Score:3, Informative)
We have two objects moving apart in the early universe. Classically, the distance D between them will be the relatvive velocity, v, times the age of the universe at the time the light in question was emitted.
So lets say D = v*1 Gyr (10^9 years)
Now light from one get's emitted and starts travelling towards the other at the speed of light, c.
In order to see the light from the other source, it has to catch up to us. In other words c*t = v*t + D, where t is the time since the light was emitted.
Substituting for D and solving for v, we get v = c*t/(t+1 Gyr). Hence in a strictly classical approximation, the two objects must be travelling apart at a relative velocity of 0.93c, in reality relativity and cosmology would probably tell you they don't have to moving apart nearly that fast, but the idea is there.
If two objects are moving apart fast enough it will take the light from one a long time to catch up with the other.
Re:How is this possible? (Score:2)
When measured in your reference frame the speed of light is constant, that doesn't mean it can skip over space if you put extra distance between you and it.
Searching for astronomy data (Score:1)
Thanks for any help you can give me.
My email is gcshaw@amherst.edu
Re:Searching for astronomy data (Score:3, Informative)
Anyhow, assuming you're serious:
Gravitationa Lenses (Score:2)
Re:Gravitationa Lenses (Score:2)
Re:Gravitationa Lenses (Score:2)
...to end up being BENT into
Should always preview first...
Re:Gravitationa Lenses (Score:2)
Help, I'm confused. (Score:2)
Maybe this is a stupid question but...
How does a galaxy cluster bend light that started out before the galaxies were born?
I'm assuming that the light from the 13 billion year-old stars is travelling at light speed and that the galaxy cluster lenses are younger than 13 billion years. So how does the lens get ahead of the light and bend it? Has the light has been slowed down?
Re:Help, I'm confused. (Score:1)
You start off down the road, heading for the intersection. There is no bus there. However when you get to the intersection a big bus comes and runs you over. It was't there when your trip started but it appeared just in time to intercept you.
Re:Help, I'm confused. (Score:1)
Ooops! (Score:2)
Excuse my cynicism (and my poor spelling), but they're trying to tell us that they're capturing light that was generated billions of years ago. Enough light to charge an optical receiver. I'm currently working on a project that has to generate laser light down a fiber, and pick up the signal after on a few miles, and we're having problems doing that. Occam's Razor applies here, and in my mind there are a mountain of explanations that fit better. Simple noise would be the first one. A body that is much closer but shrouded by some sort of haze is another. Even if space were nearly completely empty, wouldn't there be enough dust after a few zillion miles to make it opaque.
Just how much can we trust people claiming to see ghost (things that may very well be there, but no one else can see them)?
Re:Ooops! (Score:5, Informative)
Ok, now for the more complex bit, actually saying what these are.
A photon multiplier is a device which takes in a stream of very low energy photons and generates a stream of much higher energy photons, as a result. It's a basic amplifier, for photons.
A very large telescope gives you a huge collection area. The larger your collection area, the more light you gather. By squishing that light into a much smaller area, you essentially generate a much brighter image.
The same is true of a long baseline. The idea, here, is to increase the time over which you collect the light. Double the time, double the light.
The consequence of using all three techniques is that you can easily collect a few photons from a vast distance, and turn them into an actual, visible image. But don't expect it to be easy. I imagine that the Hubble Telescope had to be pointed at that same spot for 24-48 hours, to generate such a view.
(When you recall that the Earth is rotating on its axis, that it's also rotating round the sun, and that the sun is moving round the galaxy, and that the galaxy has its own motion relative to other galaxies, and that ALL of these are complex, N-body problems, the challange of being able to keep the telescope pointing at a tiny cluster, billions of light-years away for more than a few seconds is an achievement. To manage it for maybe 1-2 DAYS is staggering.)
Re:Ooops! (Score:1)
Well, why don't you ASK 'em? (Or maybe do a little research on the topic.) Astronomers have been working for decades on techniques of more and more efficiently capturing photons. Supercooled charged-coupled devices are now all the rage. And don't forget, they are using telescopes with lenses 8 meters across, thus a LOT more light-gathering power.
Re:Ooops! (Score:5, Informative)
Looking at the images, they look like they've got pretty good S/N. I haven't seen the spectra, so I can't comment on that, but if they have spectra for the two different images that both give the same redshift, that's not likely noise.
Then it's haze that happens to shift all of the photons redward by a factor of 6.58. In both images independently. And doesn't make them fainter.
That's an interesting topic. All dust that we see in the universe is inside of galaxies, and preferentially blocks red light. So the places that you'd expect dust to make a difference is in the galaxy itself, in the Milky Way, or maybe in the cluster that's lensing the images (if you can come up with a way of expelling the dust out of a galaxy into the intracluster medium without destroying the dust, which isn't easy to do - dust is pretty fragile)
The only possible evidence for gray dust in the voids between large scale structure is as a way out of having the Type Ia Supernova measurements argue for the existence of a positive cosmological constant - some have argued that the reason that the supernovae are fainter isn't that they're farther away, it's that there's some fairly uniform gray dust (it can't be normal dust because then it would preferentially block red light, and we don't see that happening) that is absorbing some of the light. But there is plenty of other evidence pointing towards a positive cosmological constant, so the dust explanation is unlikely.
Hope that helps.
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Re:Red, I mean blue. AHHHHHH! (Score:2)
If only we were talking about X-rays, what I wrote would have actually been right.
[TMB]
Any sign of... (Score:1)
Re:Any sign of... (Score:2)
Elements that make up the Sun (Score:2, Informative)
Helium today mostly comes from mines. They are called mines and not wells because they produce a mineral but are essentially just like natural gas wells. This gas comes from radioactive decay which produces alpha particles---helium ions---which then capture electrons from its surrounding and becomes helium gas.
They came from Outer Space! (Score:1)
"The clump appears to......"
Is it just me or is Slashdot turning into less a tech website and more a B-movie?
There are enough galaxies that... (Score:2)
Great photo!! (Be sure to click on it to see the higher-res copy.)
It amazes me that there are so many galaxies that each of us could own one. If we each owned a galaxy, then each of us would own more stars than there are people on Earth.
There's plenty of energy in the universe, it's just not always where you need it.
ABC News article: "Abu Sayyaf
-1 No heavy elements (Score:5, Funny)
Uh, excuse me? (Score:1)
Did we find out the exact age of the universe while I was on vacation or something? Why didn't someone tell me?
I sure hope that when someone discovers the meaning of life, or the existence of an afterlife that I'm not out of the loop on that one, too.
In related news... (Score:1)
One political analyst pointed out the remarkable similarity between the cluster and the birthmark on Mikhail Gorbachev's head.
Publication of a Little Red Datacube has been started in Shanghai.
Re:Uh... a slight miscalculation (Score:1)
Re:hey (Score:1)
That said, i may just be bitter because I've never modded, despite being eligable. I think i actually have an activity level too high - they say they go for Joe Average, and I always hit the 2-minute limit. They obviously don't check against karma when deciding that one...sigh...oh, well.
Re:Which one of these words doesn't belong? (Score:1)
Re:Ever thought of creation ? (Score:4, Insightful)
As far as the subject of this article goes: astronomers (and biologists, and geologists) are under no more obligation to consider the beliefs of creationists than historians are to consider the beliefs of Holocaust-deniers, or geographers are to consider the beliefs of the Flat Earth Society.
Re:Call with the real discoveries (Score:4, Insightful)
In the first stage you have some phenomena that you want to try to 'explain' (in scientific parlance 'explain' actually means 'predict through use of appropriate mathematical formulae). The scientists will come up with hypotheses that yield testable formulae for predicting the phenomena in question.
In the second stage you gather lots of empirical data and see if the predictions of your hypotheses agree with the data you have gathered. You may gather data specifically chosen to prove your hypotheses false (since it should be easy to predict what measurements are most likely to disagree with your hypotheses) or you may just use whatever data comes easily to hand (there may be a large mass of existing data, as with Tyco Brahe's astronomical measurements used by Kepler to derive the shapes of the planets' orbits).
Once you have gathered enough data you can see where your hypotheses disagree with the measured data and adjust the hypotheses accordingly. Eventually your hypotheses agree to the measured data to within the current error bounds, at which time you have an official theory.
Importantly, you never actually have access to truth. Nothing is ever proven (though many things may be disproven) and everything is open to some level of doubt. It's just a matter of how much doubt you find acceptable for any give application. For common, everyday tasks, the precision required of most measurements is very low:
The real problem with your use of the terms 'truth' and 'proof' is that they don't mean the same thing to a scientist as they mean in common english. In common english Truth is absolute and Proof is irrefutable. To a scientist, however, truth simply means that the formulae yield answers close enough to measured values that we can't tell the difference (modulo the accuracy of our measuring devices), and proof simply means that no data has been found that clearly contradicts a specific set of formulae (aka, an hypothesis).
Just because science isn't accessing some cosmic Truth doesn't mean that sceintific theories are really just opinions. An opinion is a though in someone's head that has no concrete basis in fact. A scientific theory, on the other hand, is a set of formulae that serve to predict objective, measurable values for physical phenomena to within some specified error range. It may not be too similar to what most people think of as Truth, but it is pretty far from the common definition of option as well. It is certainly a damn sight more reliable that the assorted forms of propaganda, superstition, and outright ignorance that have passed themselves off as Truth for most of history.