Tuesday, May 31, 2022

Hubble Helps Explain Why Uranus and Neptune Are Different Colours

Hubble’s Observations of Uranus and Neptune in 2021
 
Diagram of the Atmospheres of Uranus and Neptune 
 
Hubble’s Observation of Uranus in 2021
 
Hubble’s Observation of Neptune in 2021


Videos

Space Sparks Episode 15: Hubble Helps Explain Why Uranus and Neptune Are Different Colours
Space Sparks Episode 15: Hubble Helps Explain Why Uranus and Neptune Are Different Colours



Astronomers may now know why Uranus and Neptune are different colours. Using observations from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, as well as the Gemini North telescope and the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility, researchers have developed a single atmospheric model that matches observations of both planets. The model reveals that excess haze on Uranus builds up in the planet’s stagnant, sluggish atmosphere and makes it appear a lighter tone than Neptune.

Neptune and Uranus have much in common — they have similar masses, sizes, and atmospheric compositions — yet their appearances are notably different. At visible wavelengths Neptune is a rich, deep azure hue whereas Uranus is a distinctly pale shade of cyan. Astronomers now have an explanation for why the two planets are different colours.

New research suggests that a layer of concentrated haze that is present on both planets is thicker on Uranus than on Neptune and therefore ‘whitens’ Uranus’s appearance more than Neptune’s [1]. If there was no haze in the atmospheres of Neptune and Uranus, both would appear almost equally blue as a result of blue light being scattered in their atmospheres [2]

This conclusion comes from a model [3] that an international team led by Patrick Irwin, Professor of Planetary Physics at Oxford University, developed to describe aerosol layers in the atmospheres of Neptune and Uranus [4]. Previous investigations of these planets’ upper atmospheres had focused on the appearance of the atmosphere at only specific wavelengths. However, this new model consists of multiple atmospheric layers and matches observations from both planets across a wide range of wavelengths. The new model also includes haze particles within deeper layers that had previously been thought to contain only clouds of methane and hydrogen sulphide ices. 

This is the first model to simultaneously fit observations of reflected sunlight from ultraviolet to near-infrared wavelengths,” explained Irwin, who is the lead author of a paper presenting this result in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets. “It’s also the first to explain the difference in visible colour between Uranus and Neptune.

The team’s model consists of three layers of aerosols at different heights [5]. The key layer that affects the colours is the middle layer, which is a layer of haze particles (referred to in the paper as the Aerosol-2 layer) that is thicker on Uranus than on Neptune. The team suspects that, on both planets, methane ice condenses onto the particles in this layer, pulling the particles deeper into the atmosphere in a shower of methane snow. Because Neptune has a more active, turbulent atmosphere than Uranus does, the team believes Neptune’s atmosphere is more efficient at churning up methane particles into the haze layer and producing this snow. This removes more of the haze and keeps Neptune’s haze layer thinner than it is on Uranus, with the result that the blue colour of Neptune looks stronger.

We hoped that developing this model would help us understand clouds and hazes in the ice giant atmospheres,” commented Mike Wong, an astronomer at the University of California, Berkeley, and a member of the team behind this result. “Explaining the difference in colour between Uranus and Neptune was an unexpected bonus!” 

To create this model, Irwin’s team analysed archival data spanning several years from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. This spectrographic data was obtained with Hubble’s Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS), covering a broad range of wavelengths from ultraviolet through to visible and infrared (0.3–1.0 micrometres). It was complemented with data from ground-based telescopes: a set of new observations from the Gemini North telescope, and archival data from the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility, both located in Hawai‘i.

Not only did the team examine the spectra of the planets, they also made use of some of the many images Hubble has taken of the two planets with its Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) instrument. Hubble provides excellent views of the distinctive atmospheric storms shared by both planets known as ‘dark spots’, which astronomers have been aware of for many years. It wasn't known exactly which atmospheric layers were disturbed by dark spots to make them visible to Hubble. The model produced by the team explains what gives the spots a dark appearance, and why they are more easily detectable on Uranus compared to Neptune.

The authors thought that a darkening of the aerosols at the deepest layer of their model would produce dark spots similar to those seen on Neptune and perhaps Uranus. With the detailed images from Hubble, they could check and confirm their hypothesis. Indeed, simulated images based on that model were seen to closely match the WFC3 images of both planets, producing dark spots visible at the same wavelengths. The same thick haze in the Aerosol-2 layer on Uranus that causes its lighter blue colour is believed also to obscure these dark spots more often than on Neptune.




Notes

[1] This whitening effect is similar to how clouds in exoplanet atmospheres dull or ‘flatten’ features in the spectra of exoplanets.

[2] This process — referred to as Rayleigh scattering — is what makes the sky blue here on Earth. Rayleigh scattering occurs predominantly at shorter, bluer wavelengths; the red light scattered from the haze and air molecules is more absorbed than the blue light by methane molecules in the atmosphere of the planets. On Earth, it is nitrogen molecules in the atmosphere that scatter most of the light in this way, while on Neptune and Uranus hydrogen is the main scattering molecule.

[3] A scientific model is a computational tool used by scientists to test predictions about a phenomenon that would be impossible to test in the real world.

[4] An aerosol is a suspension of fine droplets or particles in a gas. Common examples on Earth include mist, soot, smoke, and fog. On Neptune and Uranus, particles produced by sunlight interacting with elements in the atmosphere (photochemical reactions) are responsible for aerosol hazes in these planets’ atmospheres.

[5] The deepest layer (referred to in the paper as the Aerosol-1 layer) is thick and is composed of a mixture of hydrogen sulphide ice and particles produced by the interaction of the planets’ atmospheres with sunlight. The top layer is an extended layer of haze (the Aerosol-3 layer) similar to the middle layer but more tenuous. On Neptune, large methane ice particles also form above this layer.




More Information

The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between ESA and NASA.

Gemini North is one half of the international Gemini Observatory, which is a Program of NSF's NOIRLab.

This research was presented in the paper “Hazy blue worlds: A holistic aerosol model for Uranus and Neptune, including Dark Spots” to appear in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets.

The team is composed of P. G. J. Irwin (Department of Physics, University of Oxford, UK), N. A. Teanby (School of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, UK), L. N. Fletcher (School of Physics & Astronomy, University of Leicester, UK), D. Toledo (Instituto Nacional de Tecnica Aeroespacial, Spain), G. S. Orton (Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, USA), M. H. Wong (Center for Integrative Planetary Science, University of California, Berkeley, USA), M. T. Roman (School of Physics & Astronomy, University of Leicester, UK), S. Perez-Hoyos (University of the Basque Country, Spain), A. James (Department of Physics, University of Oxford, UK), J. Dobinson (Department of Physics, University of Oxford, UK).

The observations were conducted as part of the following Hubble observing programmes: spectra of Neptune with HST/STIS, 9330 (PI: E. Karkoschka); spectra of Uranus with HST/STIS, 9035 (PI: E. Karkoschka), 12894 (PI: L. Sromovsky), 14113 (PI: L. Sromovsky); imaging of Uranus and Neptune with HST/WFC3, 13937 and 15262 (PI: A. Simon).

Image credit: NASA, ESA, A. Simon (Goddard Space Flight Center), and M. H. Wong (University of California, Berkeley) and the OPAL team




Links




Contacts:

Patrick Irwin
University of Oxford
United Kingdom
Email:
patrick.irwin@physics.ox.ac.uk

Bethany Downer
ESA/Hubble Chief Science Communications Officer
Email:
Bethany.Downer@esahubble.org




Monday, May 30, 2022

Supermassive Black Holes Inside of Dying Galaxies Detected in Early Universe


Figure1: Dying galaxies around 10 billion years ago (red objects in the magnified panels) were selected from multi-wavelength observations. This research investigated them using the data of the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS), which includes the observational data of the Subaru Telescope, Chandra X-ray Observatory, and Very Large Array. The central image shows the COSMOS region. It is a three-color composite of the i-band image from Subaru Telescope/Hyper Suprime-Cam, and J- and Ks-band images from the VISTA telescope. High resolution image is
here (2.5 MB). Credit: NAOJ

An international team of astronomers used a database combining observations from the best telescopes in the world, including the Subaru Telescope, to detect the signal from the active supermassive black holes of dying galaxies in the early Universe. The appearance of these active supermassive black holes correlates with changes in the host galaxy, suggesting that a black hole could have far reaching effects on the evolution of its host galaxy.

The Milky Way Galaxy where we live includes stars of various ages, including stars still forming. But in some other galaxies, known as elliptical galaxies, all of the stars are old and about the same age. This indicates that early in their histories elliptical galaxies had a period of prolific star formation that suddenly ended. Why this star formation ceased in some galaxies but not others is not well understood. One possibility is that a supermassive black hole disrupts the gas in some galaxies, creating an environment unsuitable for star formation.

To test this theory, astronomers look at distant galaxies. Due to the finite speed of light, it takes time for light to travel across the void of space. The light we see from an object 10 billion light-years away had to travel for 10 billion years to reach Earth. Thus the light we see today shows us what the galaxy looked like when the light left that galaxy 10 billion years ago. So looking at distant galaxies is like looking back in time. But the intervening distance also means that distant galaxies look fainter, making study difficult.


Figure 2. An elliptical galaxy (NGC850), a galaxy which stopped its star formation activity long ago. It is thought that the galaxies in Figure 1 will look like this after 10 billion years. This image was taken with HSC on the Subaru Telescope. Credit: NAOJ/HSC-SSP

To overcome these difficulties an international team led by Kei Ito at SOKENDAI in Japan used the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS) to sample galaxies 9.5-12.5 billion light-years away. COSMOS combines data taken by world leading telescopes, including the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and the Subaru Telescope. COSMOS includes radio wave, infrared light, visible light, and x-ray data.

The team first used optical and infrared data to identify two groups of galaxies: those with ongoing star formation and those where star formation has stopped. The x-ray and radio wave data signal-to-noise ratio was too weak to identify individual galaxies. So the team combined the data for different galaxies to produce higher signal to noise ratio images of "average" galaxies. In the averaged images, the team confirmed both x-ray and radio emissions for the galaxies without star formation. This is the first time such emissions have been detected for distant galaxies more than 10 billion light-years away. Furthermore, the results show that the x-ray and radio emissions are too strong to be explained by the stars in the galaxy alone, indicating the presence of an active supermassive black hole. This black hole activity signal is weaker for galaxies where star formation is ongoing. These results show that an abrupt end in star formation in the early Universe correlates with increased supermassive black hole activity.


Figure3: Schematic picture of the research method. After grouping 5211 dying galaxies by distance and the total mass of stars inside them, the team combines their images and derives the average emissions in X-ray and radio. Credit: NAOJ


Dr. Ito says, "We successfully detected the black hole activity inside dying galaxies even in the distant Universe by combining the intensive observations of large telescopes worldwide, including the Subaru Telescope. This observational result is important to understand why they are stopping their star formation." (Note 1)

This result suggests the possibility that the supermassive black hole prevents galaxies from growing. However, we do not know its mechanism yet. To understand the process, the team will continue the investigation.

These results appeared as Ito et al. "COSMOS2020: Ubiquitous AGN Activity of Massive Quiescent Galaxies at 0 < z < 5 Revealed by X-Ray and Radio Stacking" in the Astrophysical Journal on April 12, 2022. This research is supported by the JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number 20J12461.

(Note 1) Dr. Ito's doctoral thesis (Star formation activity of galaxies and its relationship to environment in distant Universe), including this research, has been recognized by the SOKENDAI award of SOKENDAI, the graduated university for advanced studies. For more detail, please refer to the Subaru Telescope's Topics article on May 26, 2022.


Relevant Links


Friday, May 27, 2022

Surveying Young Stars in the North America and Pelican Nebulae

Dust clouds ripple across the Pelican Nebula, creating a dramatic environment for star formation

Credit:Wikipedia user Urmymuse; CC BY-SA 4.0

Since 2018, the Zwicky Transient Facility has kept tabs on fleeting events and variable objects in the universe, scanning the entire northern sky every two days. What can this expansive survey tell us about the variability of young stellar objects?


Full sample of young stellar objects overlaid on an image of the North America Nebula (light-colored area on the left) and the Pelican Nebula (light-colored area on the right). The final sample of variable stars is indicated by the darker blue circles. Credit: Hillenbrand et al. 2022

Stellar Surveys

Stars of all ages show a broad variety of variability, from slow pulsations to quick bursts of accretion. Young stellar objects seem especially prone to interesting variations, perhaps thanks to the influence of their natal nebulae. In a new publication, Lynne Hillenbrand (California Institute of Technology) led a team of astronomers, which included four high school students, on a hunt for variability in young stellar objects.

The team surveyed stars in the North America and Pelican Nebulae, which lie 2,590 light-years away in the direction of the brightest star in the constellation Cygnus. Though they bear different names, the nebulae are actually connected, separated visually by a dark band of dust. The North America and Pelican Nebulae complex contains thousands of candidate young stellar objects, dozens of which have been monitored for signs of variability. Astronomers have previously used Zwicky Transient Facility data to study individual young stellar objects, but never a large sample — until now.


Examples of light curves with low, medium, and high (from left to right) values of the flux asymmetry parameter (M, top row) and quasiperiodicity parameter (Q, bottom row). Credit: Hillenbrand et al. 2022


Digging In to the Data

Hillenbrand and collaborators analyzed more than two years of Zwicky Transient Facility observations of 392 young stars, searching for signs of variability and classifying each star’s quasiperiodicity and flux asymmetry. As the names suggest, quasiperiodicity refers to how periodic or random an object’s variation is, while flux asymmetry quantifies how symmetrical an object’s light curve is. Both metrics are valuable ways to describe a variable star’s behavior, distinguishing those that vary smoothly and reliably from those that suddenly and haphazardly burst or flare.

The team found that 323 of the stars in their sample vary in brightness, and 15% do so with a regular period and symmetric light curves. Another 39% of the stars have symmetric light curves but vary either quasiperiodically or randomly. Roughly 14% of the stars are “bursters” and 29% are “dippers,” with abrupt increases and decreases in brightness, respectively.

The team also examined the colors of the objects, since color changes can give us clues as to why an object’s brightness is varying. The color analysis suggested that dippers might be due to changes in the dusty, light-absorbing material surrounding the young stars, while bursters may signal accretion episodes.

Categorizations of all stars in the sample according to their flux asymmetry and quasiperiodicity
Credit: Hillenbrand et al. 2022


Broad Applicability

This work not only provides information about hundreds of young stars, but also reflects on the metrics we use to study them. The quasiperiodicity index was designed for data from space telescopes, and some studies suggest that it can’t be used with less precise and lower cadence ground-based data. However, Hillenbrand and collaborators make a compelling case that applying thoughtful boundary conditions makes the quasiperiodicity index viable for ground-based applications as well.

This study marks the first time that Zwicky Transient Facility data have been used to investigate a large sample of young stellar objects, but surely not the last — be on the lookout for more exciting results from this survey!

Citation

“A Zwicky Transient Facility Look at Optical Variability of Young Stellar Objects in the North America and Pelican Nebulae Complex,” Lynne A. Hillenbrand et al 2022 AJ 163 263. doi:10.3847/1538-3881/ac62d8


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Thursday, May 26, 2022

Geology from 50 Light-Years: Webb Gets Ready to Study Rocky Worlds

Illustration of Exoplanet 55 Cancri e and Its Star
Credits: ARTWORK: NASA, ESA, CSA, Dani Player (STScI)

Illustration of Exoplanet LHS 3844 b and Its Star
Credits: ARTWORK: NASA, ESA, CSA, Dani Player (STScI)

Comparison of Exoplanets 55 Cancri e and LHS 3844 b to Earth and Neptune
Credits: ILLUSTRATION: NASA, ESA, CSA, Dani Player (STScI)

Simulated Thermal Emission Spectrum of Exoplanet LHS 3844 b
Credits: Illustration: NASA, ESA, CSA, Dani Player (STScI)
Science: Laura Kreidberg (MPI-A), Renyu Hu (NASA-JPL)

 


With its mirror segments beautifully aligned and its scientific instruments undergoing calibration, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is just weeks away from full operation. Soon after the first observations are revealed this summer, Webb’s in-depth science will begin.

Among the investigations planned for the first year are studies of two hot exoplanets classified as “super-Earths” for their size and rocky composition: the lava-covered 55 Cancri e and the airless LHS 3844 b. Researchers will train Webb’s high-precision spectrographs on these planets with a view to understanding the geologic diversity of planets across the galaxy, and the evolution of rocky planets like Earth.

Super-Hot Super-Earth 55 Cancri e

55 Cancri e orbits less than 1.5 million miles from its Sun-like star (one twenty-fifth of the distance between Mercury and the Sun), completing one circuit in less than 18 hours. With surface temperatures far above the melting point of typical rock-forming minerals, the day side of the planet is thought to be covered in oceans of lava.

Planets that orbit this close to their star are assumed to be tidally locked, with one side facing the star at all times. As a result, the hottest spot on the planet should be the one that faces the star most directly, and the amount of heat coming from the day side should not change much over time.

But this doesn’t seem to be the case. Observations of 55 Cancri e from NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope suggest that the hottest region is offset from the part that faces the star most directly, while the total amount of heat detected from the day side does vary.

Does 55 Cancri e Have a Thick Atmosphere?

One explanation for these observations is that the planet has a dynamic atmosphere that moves heat around. “55 Cancri e could have a thick atmosphere dominated by oxygen or nitrogen,” explained Renyu Hu of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, who leads a team that will use Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) and Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) to capture the thermal emission spectrum of the day side of the planet. “If it has an atmosphere, [Webb] has the sensitivity and wavelength range to detect it and determine what it is made of,” Hu added.

Or Is It Raining Lava in the Evening on 55 Cancri e?

Another intriguing possibility, however, is that 55 Cancri e is not tidally locked. Instead, it may be like Mercury, rotating three times for every two orbits (what’s known as a 3:2 resonance). As a result, the planet would have a day-night cycle.

“That could explain why the hottest part of the planet is shifted,” explained Alexis Brandeker, a researcher from Stockholm University who leads another team studying the planet. “Just like on Earth, it would take time for the surface to heat up. The hottest time of the day would be in the afternoon, not right at noon.”

Brandeker’s team plans to test this hypothesis using NIRCam to measure the heat emitted from the lit side of 55 Cancri e during four different orbits. If the planet has a 3:2 resonance, they will observe each hemisphere twice and should be able to detect any difference between the hemispheres.

In this scenario, the surface would heat up, melt, and even vaporize during the day, forming a very thin atmosphere that Webb could detect. In the evening, the vapor would cool and condense to form droplets of lava that would rain back to the surface, turning solid again as night falls.

Somewhat Cooler Super-Earth LHS 3844 b

While 55 Cancri e will provide insight into the exotic geology of a world covered in lava, LHS 3844 b affords a unique opportunity to analyze the solid rock on an exoplanet surface.

Like 55 Cancri e, LHS 3844 b orbits extremely close to its star, completing one revolution in 11 hours. However, because its star is relatively small and cool, the planet is not hot enough for the surface to be molten. Additionally, Spitzer observations indicate that the planet is very unlikely to have a substantial atmosphere.

What Is the Surface of LHS 3844 b Made of?

While we won’t be able to image the surface of LHS 3844 b directly with Webb, the lack of an obscuring atmosphere makes it possible to study the surface with spectroscopy.

“It turns out that different types of rock have different spectra,” explained Laura Kreidberg at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy. “You can see with your eyes that granite is lighter in color than basalt. There are similar differences in the infrared light that rocks give off.”

Kreidberg’s team will use MIRI to capture the thermal emission spectrum of the day side of LHS 3844 b, and then compare it to spectra of known rocks, like basalt and granite, to determine its composition. If the planet is volcanically active, the spectrum could also reveal the presence of trace amounts of volcanic gases.

The importance of these observations goes far beyond just two of the more than 5,000 confirmed exoplanets in the galaxy. “They will give us fantastic new perspectives on Earth-like planets in general, helping us learn what the early Earth might have been like when it was hot like these planets are today,” said Kreidberg.

These observations of 55 Cancri e and LHS 3844 b will be conducted as part of Webb’s Cycle 1 General Observers program. General Observers programs were competitively selected using a dual-anonymous review system, the same system used to allocate time on Hubble. 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.



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Media Contact:

Margaret W. Carruthers
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland

Christine Pulliam
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland

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Wednesday, May 25, 2022

Making the Nearly Invisible, Visible: Astronomers Trace the Gas that Breathes Life into Galaxies


Color composite hubble space telescope image of SGAS J152745.1+065219, the gravitationally lensed galaxy used as a backlight to observe two, hard-to-see dla clouds. Credit: M. Gladders


Maunakea, Hawaiʻi— Astronomers have developed a groundbreaking new method of seeing the massive, but barely visible gas tanks that fuel star formation.

With this innovative technique, the researchers have created the first ever spatial maps of the enormous, translucent gas clouds that birth galaxies, shedding new light on galactic evolution and star formation in the young universe.
A North Carolina State University-led team using W. M. Keck Observatory at Maunakea on Hawaiʻi Island mapped a pair of ancient, nearly 11-billion-year-old neutral hydrogen clouds, measuring their size, mass, and density in detail.

Known as Damped Lyman-α systems (or DLAs), these reservoirs of primitive gas filled most of the early universe after the Big Bang. Over cosmic time, gravity pulled the gas into clouds that slowly condensed to create some of the earliest galaxies and stars. DLAs are still observable today but detecting them using traditional methods is extremely challenging.

“DLAs are a key to understanding how galaxies form in the universe, but they are typically difficult to observe since the clouds are too diffuse and don’t emit any light themselves,” said Rongmon Bordoloi, assistant professor of physics at NC State and lead author of the study.

Since gas becomes more visible when it is in front of something bright, astrophysicists have been using quasars – distant, supermassive black holes that unleash powerful jet streams of energy – as a “backlight” to detect DLA clouds. But the light from quasar jets only illuminate pencil-thin beams through the massive gas clouds. While this method allows astronomers to locate DLAs, it doesn’t provide the macro view needed to measure their total size and mass.

“This technique has been used for decades, and has taught us a lot,” said John O’Meara, chief scientist at W. M. Keck Observatory and co-author of the study. “But it’s like being blind and touching the tail of an elephant—you have no idea what the rest looks like.”

Bordoloi and O’Meara’s team came up with a solution to this problem by combining the latest advances in integral field spectroscopy with a phenomenon that acts as nature’s magnifying glass. Using Keck Observatory’s Keck Cosmic Web Imager (KCWI), an extremely sensitive integral field spectrograph, the team located and measured two DLA systems that were backlit by SGASJ152745.1+065219—a very distant, gravitationally lensed galaxy.

“Gravitationally lensed galaxies refer to galaxies that appear stretched and brightened. This is because there is a gravitationally massive structure in front of the galaxy that bends the light coming from it as it travels toward us,” Bordoloi explained. “So we end up looking at an extended version of the object. It’s like using a cosmic telescope that increases magnification and gives us better visualization.”


An artist’s rendering showing how a cluster of galaxies (lensing cluster) acts as a gravitational lens that magnifies and extends the light from SGASJ152745.1+065219 (galaxy). This results in a projected image (marked in the rectangle panel) that is brighter and easier to detect with a telescope. This allowed astronomers to use Keck Observatory’s KCWI instrument to zoom in on the projected image and map out the gas of two giant DLAs that are two-thirds the size of the Milky Way. Credit: W. M. Keck Observatory/Adam Makarenko


This technique has been used before for heavy elements like carbon and magnesium, but not for neutral hydrogen nor for gas thought to be in the right condition to create galaxies.

“This is the culmination of my work investigating star forming gas in the universe,” O’Meara said. “I’ve been playing the quasar game for a quarter century, but now I can do it right by looking at how DLAs vary within a single structure, not statistically. It’s a new age for studies like this.”

The findings show both DLAs are colossal; they’re nearly as large as the Milky Way, with diameters exceeding 17.4 kiloparsecs. It would take light about 56,723 years to complete a one-way journey across these gaseous giants.

“The most amazing thing about the DLAs we observed is that they aren’t unique—they seem to have similarities in structure, host galaxies were detected in both, and their masses indicate that they contain enough fuel for the next generation of star formation,” Bordoloi said. “With this new technology at our disposal, we are going to be able to dig deeper into how stars formed in the early universe.”

“I’ve waited most of my career for this combination: a telescope and instrument powerful enough, and nature giving us a bit of lucky alignments to study not one but two DLAs in a rich new way,” O’Meara said. “It’s great to see the science come to fruition.”
 



About KCWI

The Keck Cosmic Web Imager (KCWI) is designed to provide visible band, integral field spectroscopy with moderate to high spectral resolution formats and excellent sky-subtraction. The astronomical seeing and large aperture of the telescope will enable studies of the connection between galaxies and the gas in their dark matter halos, stellar relics, star clusters, and lensed galaxies. Support for this project was provided by The Heising-Simons Foundation, Mt. Cuba Astronomical Foundation, and other Friends of Keck Observatory.

About W. M. Keck Observatory

The W. M. Keck Observatory telescopes are among the most scientifically productive on Earth. The two 10-meter optical/infrared telescopes atop Maunakea on the Island of Hawaii feature a suite of advanced instruments including imagers, multi-object spectrographs, high-resolution spectrographs, integral-field spectrometers, and world-leading laser guide star adaptive optics systems. Some of the data presented herein were obtained at Keck Observatory, which is a private 501(c) 3 non-profit organization operated as a scientific partnership among the California Institute of Technology, the University of California, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The Observatory was made possible by the generous financial support of the W. M. Keck Foundation. The authors wish to recognize and acknowledge the very significant cultural role and reverence that the summit of Maunakea has always had within the Native Hawaiian community. We are most fortunate to have the opportunity to conduct observations from this mountain.



Tuesday, May 24, 2022

Making Sense of Microlensing


Observing area for the fourth phase of the Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment (outlined in white). The survey has observed more than 10,000 gravitational microlensing events. Credit:
ESO/S. Brunier, OGLE/J. Skowron

Researchers have reanalyzed nearly 10,000 light curves from the Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment. The resulting catalog, which is publicly available, provides new opportunities to study black holes, exoplanets, and much more.


An illustration of a gravitational microlensing event. In this case, the lensing object is a star with an exoplanet in orbit around it. Click
here to see an animation of this event. Credit: NASA

Making Sense of Microlensing

When one astronomical object passes in front of another, the background object’s light is lensed, or focused, by the foreground object’s gravity, and we see a temporary jump in the background object’s brightness. This process of gravitational microlensing can clue us in to the presence of objects that emit little or no light, like black holes, exoplanets, and dark matter candidate objects, as they pass in front of stars or other luminous sources. Gravitational microlensing events are one of the most promising ways to find isolated stellar-mass black holes, which have long been difficult to track down.

The Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment (OGLE) has observed more than 10,000 microlensing events since the survey began in 1992. But recording the event is just the first step to understanding what caused it. Researchers model microlensing light curves to estimate the properties of the objects involved, but many factors can complicate these calculations; our vantage point — Earth — is in constant motion, stars vary in brightness for a multitude of reasons, and instruments aren’t perfect. How can we account for all those factors and extract useful information from a microlensing light curve?


An example of a gravitational microlensing event drawn from the sample analyzed in this work. In this event, OGLE BLG 156.7.141434, the brightness of the background source is variable.  Credit: Golovich et al. 2022

New and Improved

That’s where today’s article comes in. In a new publication, a team led by Nathan Golovich (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory) reanalyzed nearly 10,000 microlensing events in the third and fourth OGLE catalogs. The team’s new model accounts for Earth’s motion — which affects our perception of how quickly the background and foreground objects move relative to one another — as well as variability in the brightness of the background object and systematic instrumental effects.

This type of model has been applied to a single microlensing event, but it has never been used on a full survey because of the immense computing power it requires — Golovich and coathors used about a million hours of computer processing time to analyze their sample! The team showed that their model was able to separate the desired signal from competing factors like Earth’s motion and the variability of the object being lensed, greatly reducing sources of bias.


An example light curve and model fit for OGLE BLG 156.7.141434, the same event shown in the previous figure. Credit: Golovich et al. 2022

A Curated Catalog

What does this updated catalog mean for the search for isolated black holes? Golovich and collaborators used the open-source Population Synthesis for Compact object Lensing Events tool (PopSyCLE) to simulate microlensing events and identify locations in parameter space that isolated black holes are likely to inhabit. Based on the results of these simulations, the authors estimate that 50% or more of the 390 OGLE events in that region of parameter space are most likely due to foreground black holes.

The catalog — the largest of its kind, to date — is free to anyone who wishes to use it; if you’re interested in black holes, exoplanets, or any other kind of dark object, there’s no better time to be on the hunt!

By

Citation

“A Reanalysis of Public Galactic Bulge Gravitational Microlensing Events from OGLE-III and -IV,” Nathan Golovich et al 2022 ApJS 260 2. doi:10.3847/1538-4365/ac5969

Source: American Astronomical Society -  AAS Nova


Monday, May 23, 2022

Hiding in Plain Sight

Liller 1
Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, F. Ferraro

The muted red tones of the globular cluster Liller 1 are partially obscured in this image by a dense scattering of piercingly blue stars. In fact, it is thanks to Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) that we are able to see Liller 1 so clearly in this image, because the WFC3 is sensitive to wavelengths of light that the human eye cannot detect. Liller 1 is only 30 000 light-years from Earth — relatively neighbourly in astronomical terms — but it lies within the Milky Way’s ‘bulge’, the dense and dusty region at our galaxy’s centre. Because of that, Liller 1 is heavily obscured from view by interstellar dust, which scatters visible light (particularly blue light) very effectively. Fortunately, some infrared and red visible light are able to pass through these dusty regions. WFC3 is sensitive to both visible and near-infrared (infrared that is close to the visible) wavelengths, allowing us to see through the obscuring clouds of dust, and providing this spectacular view of Liller 1. 

Liller 1 is a particularly interesting globular cluster, because unlike most of its kind, it contains a mix of very young and very old stars. Globular clusters typically house only old stars, some nearly as old as the Universe itself. Liller1 instead contains at least two distinct stellar populations with remarkably different ages: the oldest one is 12 billion years old and the youngest component is just 1-2 billion years old. This led astronomers to conclude that this stellar system was able to form stars over an extraordinary long period of time. 

Source: ESA/Hubble/powt



Friday, May 20, 2022

A New Way to Probe the Early Universe

Simulated dark matter halo around a galaxy
Credit:
Wikipedia user Cosmo0

Astronomers have long sought to probe deep into our universe’s early history. What was the nature of matter back then? How did small galactic seeds grow into the gas-siphoning monsters we see today, and what was the nature of the mysterious substance that weighs down their halos yet eludes our earthly detectors? A team of astronomers may have uncovered a new tool that will allow us to probe this mysterious matter on smaller scales than ever before.


The Hubble eXtreme Deep Field, which shows galaxies from when the universe was just 500 million years old. Credit:
NASA, ESA, G. Illingworth, D. Magee, and P. Oesch, R. Bouwens, and the HUDF09 Team

Peering Back into the Universe’s History

One of the key tasks of modern astronomy has been to understand the early universe and how it evolved to get to the state it’s in today. The Hubble Space Telescope took us back to when the universe was just 500 million years old, and the Planck mission allowed us to peer back at the universe when it was just 380,000 years old, using the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB) (light from the very early universe that’s been stretched to the microwave regime as the universe has expanded). One of the keys to understanding the early universe is understanding how both ordinary matter and dark matter behaved at this time.

A clue to how dark matter acts on small scales might be found in the dark matter halos surrounding galaxies in the early universe. These dark matter halos were much less massive than those that surround galaxies today, so probing these halos in the early universe would provide us with a new window to look at dark matter on smaller scales and could help us understand the nature of this mysterious substance that pervades our cosmos.


Different areas probed by different experiments, showing redshift against wavenumber, which characterizes the spatial scale explored with the measurements. Credit: Sabti et al. 2022

Probing Dark Matter on Small Scales

A group of scientists led by Nashwan Sabti from King’s College London has used a decade of observations from the Hubble Space Telescope to study dark matter at very small scales, looking at distant galaxies and their halos using a method complementary to the range of local probes and the CMB. The team first determined the ultraviolet galaxy luminosity function (UV LF), which captures the abundance of galaxies as a function of their UV luminosity. Because the UV LF is dependent on the mass distribution of dark matter halos, this technique allowed the authors to indirectly probe how dark matter is distributed on different scales during this early period in the universe’s history, revealing clues as to how the early structure of our universe formed and evolved.


Power spectrum as a function of wavenumber k for seven different works. Wavenumber is a measure of the spatial scale, and the matter power spectrum indicates what the matter density perturbations look like on any given scale. The results of this study (black crosses) are plotted along with previous measurements, showing that this work probes smaller scales (larger k) than any other experiment has before. Credit: Sabti et al. 2022


Using the Power of a Wide Range of Measurements

The authors’ UV LF measurements cover a wide range, from when the universe was 48 million years old all the way up to 156 million years old, and probe scales beyond what the CMB allows us to explore. The authors model the resulting matter power spectrum — a measure of how matter clusters on different spatial scales — with different parameters to test a range of theoretical models describing dark matter. The team found that their modeled power spectra were consistent with the theoretical predictions of the lambda cold dark matter model of cosmology (the standard model of the universe) up to a certain point. The power spectra disfavor other models, such as the warm dark matter model, which doesn’t predict structure consistent with what the team found on small scales.

These new results show that measuring the UV LF is a unique, powerful technique for probing the nature of dark matter. The newly launched JWST and the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, which is set to launch in mid-2027, will observe galaxies farther back in the universe’s history and probe dark matter halos on smaller scales, making this an exciting time for dark matter astronomers!

Citation

“New Roads to the Small-scale Universe: Measurements of the Clustering of Matter with the High-redshift UV Galaxy Luminosity Function,” Nashwan Sabti et al 2022 ApJL 928 L20. doi:10.3847/2041-8213/ac5e9c

Thursday, May 19, 2022

Hubble Reaches New Milestone in Mystery of Universe's Expansion Rate


This collection of 36 images from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope features galaxies that are all hosts to both
Cepheid variables and supernovae. These two celestial phenomena are both crucial tools used by astronomers to determine astronomical distance, and have been used to refine our measurement of the Hubble constant, the expansion rate of the universe.

The galaxies shown in this photo (from top row, left to bottom row, right) are:


NGC 7541, NGC 3021, NGC 5643, NGC 3254, NGC 3147, NGC 105, NGC 2608, NGC 3583, NGC 3147, Mrk 1337, NGC 5861, NGC 2525, NGC 1015, UGC 9391, NGC 691, NGC 7678, NGC 2442, NGC 5468, NGC 5917, NGC 4639, NGC 3972, The Antennae Galaxies , NGC 5584, M106, NGC 7250, NGC 3370, NGC 5728, NGC 4424, NGC 1559, NGC 3982, NGC 1448, NGC 4680, M101, NGC 1365, NGC 7329, and NGC 3447. Credits: Science: NASA, ESA, Adam G. Riess (STScI, JHU)

Three Decades of Space Telescope Observations Converge on a Precise Value for the Hubble Constant

Science history will record that the search for the expansion rate of the universe was the great Holy Grail of 20th century cosmology. Without any observational evidence for space expanding, contracting, or standing still, we wouldn't have a clue to whether the universe was coming or going. What's more, we wouldn't have a clue about its age either – or in fact if the universe was eternal.

The first act of this revelation came when, a century ago, American astronomer Edwin Hubble discovered myriad galaxies outside of our home galaxy, the Milky Way. And, the galaxies weren't standing still. Hubble found that the farther a galaxy is, the faster it appears to be moving away from us. This could be interpreted as the uniform expansion of space. Hubble even said that he studied the galaxies simply as "markers of space." However he was never fully convinced of the idea of a uniformly expanding universe. He suspected his measurements might be evidence of something else more oddball going on in the universe.

For decades after Hubble, astronomers have toiled to nail down the expansion rate that would yield a true age for the universe. This required building a string of cosmic distance ladders assembled from sources that astronomers have a reasonable confidence in their intrinsic brightness. The brightest, and therefore farthest detectable milepost markers are Type Ia supernovae.

When the Hubble Space Telescope was launched in 1990 the universe's expansion rate was so uncertain that its age might only be 8 billion years or as great as 20 billion years.

After 30 years of meticulous work using the Hubble telescope's extraordinary observing power, numerous teams of astronomers have narrowed the expansion rate to a precision of just over 1%. This can be used to predict that the universe will double in size in 10 billion years.

The measurement is about eight times more precise than Hubble's expected capability. But it's become more than just refining a number to cosmologists. In the interim the mystery of dark energy pushing the universe apart was discovered. To compound things even further, the present expansion rate is different than it is expected to be as the universe appeared shortly after the big bang.

You think this would frustrate astronomers, but instead it opens the door to discovering new physics, and confronting unanticipated questions about the underlying workings of the universe. And, finally, reminding us that we have a lot more to learn among the stars.

Completing a nearly 30-year marathon, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has calibrated more than 40 "milepost markers" of space and time to help scientists precisely measure the expansion rate of the universe — a quest with a plot twist.

Pursuit of the universe's expansion rate began in the 1920s with measurements by astronomers Edwin P. Hubble and Georges Lemaître. In 1998, this led to the discovery of "dark energy," a mysterious repulsive force accelerating the universe's expansion. In recent years, thanks to data from Hubble and other telescopes, astronomers found another twist: a discrepancy between the expansion rate as measured in the local universe compared to independent observations from right after the big bang, which predict a different expansion value.

The cause of this discrepancy remains a mystery. But Hubble data, encompassing a variety of cosmic objects that serve as distance markers, support the idea that something weird is going on, possibly involving brand new physics.

"You are getting the most precise measure of the expansion rate for the universe from the gold standard of telescopes and cosmic mile markers," said Nobel Laureate Adam Riess of the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) and the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland.

Riess leads a scientific collaboration investigating the universe's expansion rate called SHOES, which stands for Supernova, H0, for the Equation of State of Dark Energy. "This is what the Hubble Space Telescope was built to do, using the best techniques we know to do it. This is likely Hubble's magnum opus, because it would take another 30 years of Hubble's life to even double this sample size," Riess said.

Riess's team's paper , to be published in the Special Focus issue of The Astrophysical Journal reports on completing the biggest and likely last major update on the Hubble constant. The new results more than double the prior sample of cosmic distance markers. His team also reanalyzed all of the prior data, with the whole dataset now including over 1,000 Hubble orbits.

When NASA conceived of a large space telescope in the 1970s, one of the primary justifications for the expense and extraordinary technical effort was to be able to resolve Cepheids, stars that brighten and dim periodically, seen inside our Milky Way and external galaxies. Cepheids have long been the gold standard of cosmic mile markers since their utility was discovered by astronomer Henrietta Swan Leavitt in 1912. To calculate much greater distances, astronomers use exploding stars called Type Ia supernovae.

Combined, these objects built a "cosmic distance ladder" across the universe and are essential to measuring the expansion rate of the universe, called the Hubble constant after Edwin Hubble. That value is critical to estimating the age of the universe and provides a basic test of our understanding of the universe.

Starting right after Hubble's launch in 1990, the first set of observations of Cepheid stars to refine the Hubble constant was undertaken by two teams: the HST Key Project led by Wendy Freedman, Robert Kennicutt and Jeremy Mould, Marc Aaronson and another by Allan Sandage and collaborators, that used Cepheids as milepost markers to refine the distance measurement to nearby galaxies. By the early 2000s the teams declared "mission accomplished" by reaching an accuracy of 10 percent for the Hubble constant, 72 plus or minus 8 kilometers per second per megaparsec.

In 2005 and again in 2009, the addition of powerful new cameras onboard the Hubble telescope launched "Generation 2" of the Hubble constant research as teams set out to refine the value to an accuracy of just one percent. This was inaugurated by the SHOES program. Several teams of astronomers using Hubble, including SHOES, have converged on a Hubble constant value of 73 plus or minus 1 kilometer per second per megaparsec. While other approaches have been used to investigate the Hubble constant question, different teams have come up with values close to the same number.

The SHOES team includes long-time leaders Dr. Wenlong Yuan of Johns Hopkins University, Dr. Lucas Macri of Texas A&M University, Dr. Stefano Casertano of STScI and Dr. Dan Scolnic of Duke University. The project was designed to bracket the universe by matching the precision of the Hubble constant inferred from studying the cosmic microwave backgroundradiation leftover from the dawn of the universe. "The Hubble constant is a very special number. It can be used to thread a needle from the past to the present for an end-to-end test of our understanding of the universe. This took a phenomenal amount of detailed work," said Dr. Licia Verde, a cosmologist at ICREA and the ICC-University of Barcelona, speaking about the SHOES team's work.

The team measured 42 of the supernova milepost markers with Hubble. Because they are seen exploding at a rate of about one per year, Hubble has, for all practical purposes, logged as many supernovae as possible for measuring the universe's expansion. Riess said, "We have a complete sample of all the supernovae accessible to the Hubble telescope seen in the last 40 years." Like the lyrics from the song "Kansas City," from the Broadway musical Oklahoma, Hubble has "gone about as fur as it c'n go!"

Weird Physics?

The expansion rate of the universe was predicted to be slower than what Hubble actually sees. By combining the Standard Cosmological Model of the Universe and measurements by the European Space Agency's Planck mission (which observed the relic cosmic microwave background from 13.8 billion years ago), astronomers predict a lower value for the Hubble constant: 67.5 plus or minus 0.5 kilometers per second per megaparsec, compared to the SHOES team's estimate of 73.

Given the large Hubble sample size, there is only a one-in-a-million chance astronomers are wrong due to an unlucky draw, said Riess, a common threshold for taking a problem seriously in physics. This finding is untangling what was becoming a nice and tidy picture of the universe's dynamical evolution. Astronomers are at a loss for an explanation of the disconnect between the expansion rate of the local universe versus the primeval universe, but the answer might involve additional physics of the universe.

Such confounding findings have made life more exciting for cosmologists like Riess. Thirty years ago they started out to measure the Hubble constant to benchmark the universe, but now it has become something even more interesting. "Actually, I don't care what the expansion value is specifically, but I like to use it to learn about the universe," Riess added.

NASA's new Webb Space Telescope will extend on Hubble's work by showing these cosmic milepost markers at greater distances or sharper resolution than what Hubble can see.

The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between NASA and ESA (European Space Agency). NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the telescope. The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Maryland, conducts Hubble science operations. STScI is operated for NASA by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy in Washington, D.C.
 



Credits: Release: NASA, ESA, STScI

Media Contact:

Ray Villard
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland

Science Contact:

Adam G. Riess
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland


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Wednesday, May 18, 2022

Hubble Spies a Glittering Gathering of Stars

NGC 6558
Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, R. Cohen

This glittering gathering of stars is the globular cluster NGC 6558, and it was captured by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope’s Advanced Camera for Surveys. NGC 6558 is closer to the centre of the Milky Way than Earth is, and lies about 23 000 light years away in the constellation Sagittarius.

Globular clusters like NGC 6558 are tightly bound collections of tens of thousands to millions of stars, and they can be found in a wide range of galaxies. As this observation shows, the stars in globular clusters can be densely packed; this image is thronged with stars in a rich variety of hues. Some of the brightest inhabitants of this globular cluster are surrounded by prominent diffraction spikes, which are imaging artefacts caused by starlight interacting with the inner workings of Hubble.

Globular clusters equip astronomers with interesting natural laboratories in which to test their theories, as all the stars in a globular cluster formed at approximately the same time with similar initial composition. These stellar clusters therefore provide unique insights into how different stars evolve under similar conditions. This image comes from a set of observations investigating globular clusters in the inner Milky Way. Astronomers were interested in studying these globular clusters to gain greater insight into how globular clusters in the inner Milky Way form and evolve.




Tuesday, May 17, 2022

Featured Image: A Shock Surrounding a Black Widow Pulsar


Though it’s not uncommon for stars to snack on their stellar companions from time to time, it’s rare for them to eat their associates entirely. This is the scenario proposed for black widow pulsars — tiny, dense stellar remnants that rotate rapidly, produce beams of radio emission and fierce winds, and, like the spiders from which they get their name, eventually consume their companions. Black widow pulsars may be the missing link in the creation of single millisecond pulsars — those that rotate hundreds to thousands of times a second but lack a neighboring star to lend them the angular momentum to do so. In a new article, a team led by Roger Romani (Stanford University) used images and spectra to study the first known black widow pulsar, PSR J1959+2048. The image above (click for the full view) reveals the shock created by the pulsar’s outflowing wind colliding with interstellar material. Romani and collaborators used this rare sight — there are only nine known pulsar wind nebulae with associated shocks — to begin the investigation into whether this pulsar will lose too much energy to fully consume its companion. To learn more about this unusual object, check out the full article below!

Citation

“The Bow Shock and Kinematics of PSR J1959+2048,” Roger W. Romani et al 2022 ApJ 930 101. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ac6263




Monday, May 16, 2022

MIRI’s Sharper View Hints at New Possibilities for Science

Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech (left), NASA/ESA/CSA/STScI (right)

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is aligned across all four of its science instruments, as seen in a previous engineering image showing the observatory’s full field of view. Now, we take a closer look at that same image, focusing on Webb’s coldest instrument: the Mid-Infrared Instrument, or MIRI.

The MIRI test image (at 7.7 microns) shows part of the Large Magellanic Cloud. This small satellite galaxy of the Milky Way provided a dense star field to test Webb’s performance.

Here, a close-up of the MIRI image is compared to a past image of the same target taken with NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope’s Infrared Array Camera (at 8.0 microns). The retired Spitzer telescope was one of NASA’s Great Observatories and the first to provide high-resolution images of the near- and mid-infrared universe. Webb, with its significantly larger primary mirror and improved detectors, will allow us to see the infrared sky with improved clarity, enabling even more discoveries.

Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech (top), NASA/ESA/CSA/STScI (bottom)

For example, Webb’s MIRI image shows the interstellar gas in unprecedented detail. Here, you can see the emission from “polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons,” or molecules of carbon and hydrogen that play an important role in the thermal balance and chemistry of interstellar gas. When Webb is ready to begin science observations, studies such as these with MIRI will help give astronomers new insights into the birth of stars and protoplanetary systems. 

In the meantime, the Webb team has begun the process of setting up and testing Webb’s instruments to begin science observations this summer. Today at 11 a.m., Webb experts will preview these next two months of instrument preparations in a teleconference for media. Listen to the audio stream live at nasa.gov/live.

Credit: NASA/ESA/CSA/STScI

Alise Fisher