Strange New 'Species' of Ultra-Red Galaxy Discovered
"We've
had to go to extremes to get the models to match our observations," said
Jiasheng Huang of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA). Huang
is lead author on the paper announcing the find, which was published online by
the Astrophysical Journal.
Spitzer
succeeded where Hubble failed because Spitzer is sensitive to infrared light --
light so red that it lies beyond the visible part of the spectrum. The newfound
galaxies are more than 60 times brighter in the infrared than they are at the
reddest colors Hubble can detect.
Galaxies
can be very red for several reasons. They might be very dusty. They might
contain many old, red stars. Or they might be very distant, in which case the
expansion of the universe stretches their light to longer wavelengths and hence
redder colors (a process known as redshifting). All three reasons seem to apply
to the newfound galaxies.
All
four galaxies are grouped near each other and appear to be physically
associated, rather than being a chance line-up. Due to their great distance, we
see them as they were only a billion years after the Big Bang -- an era when
the first galaxies formed.
"Hubble
has shown us some of the first protogalaxies that formed, but nothing that
looks like this. In a sense, these galaxies might be a 'missing link' in
galactic evolution" said co-author Giovanni Fazio of the CfA.
Next,
researchers hope to measure an accurate redshift for the galaxies, which will
require more powerful instruments like the Large Millimeter Telescope or
Atacama Large Millimeter Array. They also plan to search for more examples of
this new "species" of extremely red galaxies.
"There's
evidence for others in other regions of the sky. We'll analyze more Spitzer and
Hubble observations to track them down," said Fazio.
NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., manages the Spitzer mission for
NASA's Science Mission Directorate. Science operations are conducted at the
Spitzer Science Center at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center built Spitzer's Infrared Array Camera, which
took the observations. The instrument's principal investigator is Giovanni
Fazio of CfA.
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