Little telescope spies gigantic faraway galaxy cluster
NASA PRESS RELEASE
Posted: 6 December 2012
Our solar system, with its colorful collection of planets, asteroids
and comets, is a fleck in the grander cosmos. Hundreds of billions of
solar systems are thought to reside in our Milky Way galaxy, which is
itself just a drop in a sea of galaxies.
A
galaxy cluster 7.7 billion light-years away has been discovered using
infrared data from NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE).
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA/WIYN/Subaru
The rarest and largest of galaxy groupings, called galaxy clusters, can
be the hardest to find. That's where NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey
Explorer (WISE) can help. The mission's all-sky infrared maps have
revealed one distant galaxy cluster and are expected to uncover
thousands more.
These massive structures are collections of up to thousands of
galaxies bound together by gravity. They were born out of seeds of
matter formed in the very early universe, and grew rapidly by a process
called inflation.
"One of the key questions in cosmology is how did the first bumps
and wiggles in the distribution of matter in our universe rapidly
evolve into the massive structures of galaxies we see today," said
Anthony Gonzalez of University of Florida, Gainesville, who led the
research program. The results are published in the Astrophysical
Journal.
"By uncovering the most massive of galaxy clusters billions of
light-years away with WISE, we can test theories of the universe's early
inflation period."
WISE completed its all-sky survey in 2011, after surveying the
entire sky twice at infrared wavelengths. The 16-inch (40-centimeter)
telescope ran out of its coolant as expected in 2010, but went on to
complete the second sky scan using two of its four infrared channels,
which still functioned without coolant. At that time, the goal of the
mission extension was to hunt for more near-Earth asteroids via a
project called NEOWISE.
NASA has since funded the WISE team to combine all that data,
allowing astronomers to study everything from nearby stars to distant
galaxies. These next-generation all-sky images, part of a new project
called "AllWISE," will be significantly more sensitive than those
previously released, and will be publicly available in late 2013.
Gonzalez and his team plan to use the enhanced WISE data to hunt
for more massive galaxy clusters. The first one they spotted, MOO
J2342.0+1301, is located more than 7 billion light-years away, or
halfway back to the time of the Big Bang. It is hundreds of times more
massive than our Milky Way.
Artist's concept of the WISE spacecraft in orbit. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
By scanning the whole sky with the improved AllWISE data, the team will
sleuth out the true monsters of the bunch, clusters as big as thousands
of times the mass of the Milky Way, assembled even earlier in the
history of the universe.
Galaxy clusters from the first half of the universe are hard to
find because they are so far away and because not very many had time to
assemble by then. What's more, they are especially hard to see using
visible-light telescopes: light that left these faraway structures in
visible wavelengths has been stretched into longer, infrared wavelengths
due to the expansion of space. WISE can hunt some of these rare
colossal structures down because it scanned the whole sky in infrared
light.
"I had pretty much written off using WISE to find distant galaxy
clusters because we had to reduce the telescope diameter to only 16
inches [40 centimeters] to stay within our cost guidelines, so I am
thrilled that we can find them after all," said Peter Eisenhardt, the
WISE project scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena,
Calif. and an author of the new paper. "The longer exposures from
AllWISE open the door wide to see the most massive structures forming in
the distant universe."
Other projects planned for the enhanced WISE data include the
search for nearby, hidden cool stars, including those with masses as low
as planets. If a large planet or tiny star does exist close to our
solar system, an object some call "Tyche," then WISE's infrared data may
reveal it.
Other authors of the new study are: Daniel Gettings and Conor
Mancone of the University of Florida; Adam Stanford of Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, Calif., and University of
California, Davis; Mark Brodwin of University of Missouri, Kansas City;
Daniel Stern of JPL; Gregory Zeimann of University of California, Davis;
Frank Masci of the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center at the
California Institute of Technology, Pasadena; Casey Papovich of Texas
A&M University, College Station; Ichi Tanaka of the National
Astronomical Observatory of Japan; and Edward (Ned) Wright of UCLA.
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