VLT Smashes Record of Farthest Known Galaxy 39
rduke15 writes "From this press release of the European Southern Observatory : 'Named Abell 1835 IR1916, the newly discovered galaxy [...] is located about 13,230 million light-years away. It is therefore seen at a time when the Universe was merely 470 million years young[...].'
More details and pictures here."
Seniors (Score:2)
The Beginning (Score:1)
Re:The Beginning (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The Beginning (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The Beginning (Score:1)
But how is it that we can keep looking further and further away. Wouldn't there be a point in time beyond which we can't see since the universe just isn't wide enough to have had any light traveling for that long? i.e. if the furthest object is 10 billion light years away, then we wouldn't be able to see any further back then 10 billion years???
The only way I can see around this is if
Re:The Beginning (Score:5, Informative)
General Relativity *does* allow separate parcels of space to move apart from each other faster than the speed of light, in that GR is only valid for local inertial reference frames. Space *itself* is doing the expanding, and not the interaction of mass and energy sitting through it, which is what is described by GR. Sorry, I'm not a GR physicist, so I can't give a good explanation for what seem like a cheat in GR, but it is apparently valid.
Your last line is partly true, in that the universe is thought to have had an era of insanely rapid expansion - one doubling of its effective size every 10**-34 seconds or so - for many tens of thousands of doublings, back when the universe was about 10**-30 seconds old. It's called Inflation theory, and it was created to explain why the effective temperature of seemingly separate parts of the universe is very very similiar. The argument is that the universe we can see (and anything beyond 13 billion light years away) was, at one time, in thermal equilibrium with itself, and then this inflation era blew up the universe faster than the local speed of light in any causal region.
Erm. Just had a few beers, so this may not help, but go check out "The inflationary Universe" by Alan Guth, who explains it a lot clearer than me at the moment
Cheers,
Dr Fish
thousand million? (Score:1)
So 13.23 billion light years.
Re:thousand million? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:thousand million? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:thousand million? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:thousand million? (Score:1)
Re:thousand million? (Score:5, Interesting)
Milliard USED to be the Euro term for the U.S. billion, but most nations have switched to the U.S. term for 1,000,000,000. Milliard and the old Euro def of billion are archaic usages, and billion is generally used in the U.S. sense. Check Wikipedia for Milliard [wikipedia.org] and also Wiki for Billion [wikipedia.org]. A google-fight between billion and milliard results in 12,800,000 hits for billion and 235,000 for milliard. Billion wins.
Of course, I'm American, so I don't know how often the general public in Europe uses those terms and with what meanings; but officially in the government the terms have changed.
Re:thousand million? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:thousand million? (Score:3, Informative)
Links to an easier to read summary (Score:5, Informative)
End of galaxy (Score:2, Interesting)
I mean what's it expanding into?
The universe is infinite (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The universe is infinite (Score:3, Informative)
WMAP [astronomy.com] showed that the universe is flat beyond reasonable doubt.
I don't understand your point about "true movement". If the distance between two objects changes as a function of time they are said to be moving.
Simon
It's expanding "Into" itself (Score:5, Informative)
An analogy that may help:
Take a circular rubber sheet. Draw some dots on it. Pull the sides of the rubber sheet and watch the dots separate.
Now imagine your rubber sheet started out as an infinite plane: it is no more infinite after stretching than before, yet all distances have increased.
Now generalize from an infinite plane to an infinite volume, and you should get the idea.
Re:It's expanding "Into" itself (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It's expanding "Into" itself (Score:2)
The grandparent is correct, and on topic. You are correct, but entirely off topic, misleadingly so. Go away.
Re:It's expanding "Into" itself (Score:1)
Take a rubber sheet that is infinite in size.
Expand it.
It is no more infinite than before expanding it.
Well, that may be, but given that there are different sizes of infinity, it's not obvious to me that that would necessarily be the case.
But, as I said, I'm not a mathematician, so it may very well be true.
But if this hypothetical plane is more infinite after stretching than it is before stretching, then the analogy fails.
Re:It's expanding "Into" itself (Score:2)
Re:It's expanding "Into" itself (Score:1)
And not the spirit of the moderation system either - the moderation guidelines (as if anybody reads them) encourages moderators to mod good posts up, rather than spending a lot of points modding other posts down:
Concentrate more on promoting than on demoting. The real goal here is to find the juicy good stuff and let others read it. Do not promote personal agendas. Do not let your opini [slashdot.org]
Re:End of galaxy (Score:5, Interesting)
It is a hard idea to grasp along with such questions as what is the shape of the universe.
One of the other replies had it correct.. it is not that the galaxies are moving away from each other, it is that space itself is expanding and therefore the distance between all galaxies is increasing. It was the observation that all other galaxies are retreating from us the lead to the theory that we were at the centre of the universe. Of couse it did not take long to prove this wrong.
Merlin.
Ob Simpsons Quote (Score:2, Funny)
Your theory of a donut shaped universe is intriguing. I may have to steal it.
TZ
Only one line detection? (Score:5, Interesting)
Even if it doesn't turn out to be a z~10 quasar, this is an excellent piece of detective work. Big kudos to the authors on this.
Dr Fish
The detailed detection images from one of the authors. [unige.ch]
Re:Only one line detection? (Score:5, Interesting)
Moreover, the authors argue in the paper that the object sits on the appropriate gravitational-lensing caustic for a redshift 9-10 object. I.e., if the galaxy in question---Abell 1835 IR1916 --- sits on at the right place relative to the foreground galaxy cluster (Abell 1835), the General Theory of Relativity says that the mass of the cluster should magnify the galaxy by 25 to 100x in brightness (one of the authors, J.-P. Kneib, is a world expert on gravitational lensing).
Lastly, if the galaxy was at, say, z=2.7, and thus much closer---but consistent with the colors if the galaxy was full of dust---the line would have to be the forbidden doublet of singly-ionized oxygen at 372.62 and 372.89 nm. But this doublet would have been easily resolved by the high resolution of ISAAC, the infrared spectrograph on the VLT used by the authors, but not seen.
BTW, probably not a quasar --- the IR (restframe UV) colors are too blue compared to the Sloan z=6 clusters.
The thing that bothers me, though, is the the shape of the Ly-alpha line --- it's asymmetric in the wrong way (too sharp on the red side, too gaussian on the blue side) compared to the z=3 galaxies.
Still need a lot more data, though --- both deeper NIR spectra to look for the continuum and mid-IR images (perhaps from the VLT, or Spitzer Space Telescope, or eventually the James Webb Space Telescope) to confirm the restframe optical colors.
Cheers,
Scott
It give new meaning to... (Score:5, Funny)
a long time ago in a galaxy far far away...
I know...but someone had to do it...
Ahem.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Assuming that the universe is 13.5 billion years old and that we've been moving away from that galaxy near the speed of light (around 0.965c if my math is correct).
I would think that finding such a thing would tend to make people think the universe is older.
Re:Ahem.. (Score:2)
That would make it around 0.966c though.
Where was the galaxy then? (Score:2)
Re:Where was the galaxy then? (Score:1)
First, there is no center or edge of the universe. Second, at the time the light we now see was emitted from the galaxy, we were much much closer to the galaxy.
One way to think about that is to think about the surface of a sphere. Not the sphere itself, but just its surface. There is no boundary, there is no center. There are no privileged locations on the surface of a non-rotating sphere. Of course, this is a 2-d finite example. If the universe is infinite, then "radius of the universe" doesn't hav
Re:Ahem.. (Score:2)
It's 13.2 billion ligh years away so the light we are seeing now is 13.2 billion light years old because that's the time it takes for it to travel here.
Only if.. (Score:2)