This infrared image from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) was taken for the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey, or JADES, program. It shows a portion of an area of the sky known as GOODS-South, which has been well studied by the Hubble Space Telescope and other observatories. More than 45,000 galaxies are visible here. Credits: NASA, ESA, CSA, Brant Robertson (UC Santa Cruz), Ben Johnson (CfA), Sandro Tacchella (Cambridge), Marcia Rieke (University of Arizona), Daniel Eisenstein (CfA). Image processing: Alyssa Pagan (STScI)
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Among the most fundamental
questions in astronomy is: How did the first stars and galaxies form? NASA’s
James Webb Space Telescope is already providing new insights into this
question. One of the largest programs in Webb’s first year of science is the
JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey, or JADES, which will devote about 32
days of telescope time to uncover and characterize faint, distant galaxies.
While the data is still coming in, JADES already has discovered hundreds of
galaxies that existed when the universe was less than 600 million years old.
The team also has identified galaxies sparkling with a multitude of young, hot
stars.
“With JADES, we want to answer a
lot of questions, like: How did the earliest galaxies assemble themselves? How
fast did they form stars? Why do some galaxies stop forming stars?” said Marcia
Rieke of the University of Arizona in Tucson, co-lead of the JADES program.
Star Factories
Ryan Endsley of the University of
Texas at Austin led an investigation into galaxies that existed 500 to 850
million years after the big bang. This was a crucial time known as the Epoch of Reionization. For hundreds of millions of years
after the big bang, the universe was filled with a gaseous fog that made it opaque
to energetic light. By one billion years after the big bang, the fog had
cleared and the universe became transparent, a process known as reionization.
Scientists have debated whether active, supermassive black holes or galaxies
full of hot, young stars were the primary cause of reionization.
As part of the JADES program,
Endsley and his colleagues studied these galaxies with Webb’s NIRSpec
(Near-Infrared Spectrograph) instrument to look for signatures of star
formation – and found them in abundance. “Almost every single galaxy that we
are finding shows these unusually strong emission line signatures indicating intense
recent star formation. These early galaxies were very good at creating hot,
massive stars,” said Endsley.
These bright, massive stars pumped
out torrents of ultraviolet light, which transformed surrounding gas from
opaque to transparent by ionizing the atoms, removing electrons from their
nuclei. Since these early galaxies had such a large population of hot, massive
stars, they may have been the main driver of the reionization process. The
later reuniting of the electrons and nuclei produces the distinctively strong
emission lines.
Endsley and his colleagues also
found evidence that these young galaxies underwent periods of rapid star
formation interspersed with quiet periods where fewer stars formed. These fits
and starts may have occurred as galaxies captured clumps of the gaseous raw materials
needed to form stars. Alternatively, since massive stars quickly explode, they
may have injected energy into the surrounding environment periodically,
preventing gas from condensing to form new stars.
The Early Universe Revealed
Another element of the JADES
program involves the search for the earliest galaxies that existed when the
universe was less than 400 million years old. By studying these galaxies,
astronomers can explore how star formation in the early years after the big
bang was different from what is seen in current times. The light from faraway
galaxies is stretched to longer wavelengths and redder colors by the expansion
of the universe – a phenomenon called redshift. By measuring a galaxy’s redshift,
astronomers can learn how far away it is and, therefore, when it existed in the
early universe. Before Webb, there were only a few dozen galaxies observed
above a redshift of 8, when the universe was younger than 650 million years
old, but JADES has now uncovered nearly a thousand of these extremely distant
galaxies.
The gold standard for determining
redshift involves looking at a galaxy’s spectrum, which measures its brightness at
a myriad of closely spaced wavelengths. But a good approximation can be
determined by taking photos of a galaxy using filters that each cover a narrow
band of colors to get a handful of brightness measurements. In this way,
researchers can determine estimates for the distances of many thousands of
galaxies at once.
Kevin Hainline of the University of
Arizona in Tucson and his colleagues used Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera)
instrument to obtain these measurements, called photometric redshifts, and
identified more than 700 candidate galaxies that existed when the universe was
between 370 million and 650 million years old. The sheer number of these
galaxies was far beyond predictions from observations made before Webb’s
launch. The observatory’s exquisite resolution and sensitivity are allowing
astronomers to get a better view of these distant galaxies than ever before.
“Previously, the earliest galaxies
we could see just looked like little smudges. And yet those smudges represent
millions or even billions of stars at the beginning of the universe,” said
Hainline. “Now, we can see that some of them are actually extended objects with
visible structure. We can see groupings of stars being born only a few hundred
million years after the beginning of time.”
“We’re finding star formation in
the early universe is much more complicated than we thought,” added Rieke.
These results are being reported at
the 242nd meeting of the American Astronomical Society in
Albuquerque, New Mexico.
The James Webb Space Telescope is the world’s premier space science observatory. Webb will solve mysteries in our solar system, look beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probe the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb is an international program led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space Agency) and the Canadian Space Agency.
Source: Early
Universe Crackled With Bursts of Star Formation, Webb Shows | NASA
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