Wednesday, June 14, 2023

NASA’s Webb Proves Galaxies Transformed the Early Universe

Quasar J0100+2802 (NIRCam Image)
Credits: Image: NASA, ESA, CSA, Simon Lilly (ETH Zurich), Daichi Kashino (Nagoya University), Jorryt Matthee (ETH Zurich), Christina Eilers (MIT), Rob Simcoe (MIT), Rongmon Bordoloi (NCSU), Ruari Mackenzie (ETH Zurich); Image Processing: Alyssa Pagan (STScI), Ruari Mackenzie (ETH Zurich). Release Images

In the early universe, the gas between stars and galaxies was opaque – energetic starlight could not penetrate it. But 1 billion years after the big bang, the gas had become completely transparent. Why? New data from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope have pinpointed the reason: The galaxies’ stars emitted enough light to heat and ionize the gas around them, clearing our collective view over hundreds of millions of years.

The results, from a research team led by Simon Lilly of ETH Zürich in Switzerland, are the newest insights about a time period known as the Era of Reionization, when the universe underwent dramatic changes. After the big bang, gas in the universe was incredibly hot and dense. Over hundreds of millions of years, the gas cooled. Then, the universe hit “repeat.” The gas again became hot and ionized – likely due to the formation of early stars in galaxies, and over millions of years, became transparent.

Researchers have long sought definitive evidence to explain these transformations. The new results effectively pull back the curtain at the end of this reionization period. “Not only does Webb clearly show that these transparent regions are found around galaxies, we’ve also measured how large they are,” explained Daichi Kashino of Nagoya University in Japan, the lead author of the team’s first paper. “With Webb’s data, we are seeing galaxies reionize the gas around them.”

These regions of transparent gas are gigantic compared to the galaxies – imagine a hot air balloon with a pea suspended inside. Webb’s data show that these relatively tiny galaxies drove reionization, clearing massive regions of space around them. Over the next hundred million years, these transparent “bubbles” continued to grow larger and larger, eventually merging and causing the entire universe to become transparent.

Lilly’s team intentionally targeted a time just before the end of the Era of Reionization, when the universe was not quite clear and not quite opaque – it contained a patchwork of gas in various states. Scientists aimed Webb in the direction of a quasar – an extremely luminous active supermassive black hole that acts like an enormous flashlight – highlighting the gas between the quasar and our telescopes. (Find it at the center of this view: It is tiny and pink with six prominent diffraction spikes.)

As the quasar’s light traveled toward us through different patches of gas, it was either absorbed by gas that was opaque or moved freely through transparent gas. The team’s groundbreaking results were only possible by pairing Webb’s data with observations of the central quasar from the W. M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii, and the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope and the Magellan Telescope at Las Campanas Observatory, both in Chile. “By illuminating gas along our line of sight, the quasar gives us extensive information about the composition and state of the gas,” explained Anna-Christina Eilers of MIT in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the lead author of another team paper.

The researchers then used Webb to identify galaxies near this line of sight and showed that the galaxies are generally surrounded by transparent regions about 2 million light-years in radius. In other words, Webb witnessed galaxies in the process of clearing the space around them at the end of the Era of Reionization. To put this in perspective, the area these galaxies have cleared is approximately the same distance as the space between our Milky Way galaxy and our nearest neighbor, Andromeda.

Until now, researchers didn’t have this definitive evidence of what caused reionization – before Webb, they weren’t certain precisely what was responsible.

What do these galaxies look like? “They are more chaotic than those in the nearby universe,” explained Jorryt Matthee, also of ETH Zürich and the lead author of the team’s second paper. “Webb shows they were actively forming stars and must have been shooting off many supernovae. They had quite an adventurous youth!”

Along the way, Eilers used Webb’s data to confirm that the black hole in the quasar at the center of this field is the most massive currently known in the early universe, weighing 10 billion times the mass of the Sun. “We still can’t explain how quasars were able to grow so large so early in the history of the universe,” she shared. “That’s another puzzle to solve!” The exquisite images from Webb also revealed no evidence that the light from the quasar had been gravitationally lensed, ensuring that the mass measurements are definitive.

The team will soon dive into research about galaxies in five additional fields, each anchored by a central quasar. Webb’s results from the first field were so overwhelmingly clear that they couldn’t wait to share them. “We expected to identify a few dozen galaxies that existed during the Era of Reionization – but were easily able to pick out 117,” Kashino explained. “Webb has exceeded our expectations.”

Lilly’s research team, the Emission-line galaxies and Intergalactic Gas in the Epoch of Reionization (EIGER) , have demonstrated the unique power of combining conventional images from Webb's NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) with data from the same instrument's wide-field slitless spectroscopy mode, which gives a spectrum of every object in the images – turning Webb into what the team calls a “spectacular spectroscopic redshift machine.”

The team’s first publications include “EIGER I. a large sample of [O iii]-emitting galaxies at 5.3 < z < 6.9 and direct evidence for local reionization by galaxies,” led by Kashino, “EIGER II. first spectroscopic characterisation of the young stars and ionised gas associated with strong Hβ and [OIII] line-emission in galaxies at z = 5 – 7 with JWST,” led by Matthee, and “EIGER III. JWST/NIRCam observations of the ultra-luminous high-redshift quasar J0100+2802,”

led by Eilers, and will be published in The Astrophysical Journal on June 12. 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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Claire Blome
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland

Christine Pulliam
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland

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Simon Lilly (ETH Zurich)

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Tuesday, June 13, 2023

W. M. Keck Observatory Achieves First Light with Keck Cosmic Reionization Mapper


KCRM’s first-light image of the turtle nebula, which consists of a hot, dying star that blew off its outer layers, expelling a glowing shell of gas and dust. Credit: C. Martin, Caltech/Keck Observatory/NASA/STScI


Maunakea, Hawaiʻi – W. M. Keck Observatory is pleased to announce its newest instrument, the Keck Cosmic Reionization Mapper (KCRM), has successfully achieved “first light,” marking its first time ‘seeing’ the universe from Maunakea on Hawaiʻi Island. On Sunday, June 4, KCRM team members from Keck Observatory and Caltech captured a first-light image of the Turtle Nebula, or NGC 6210, located about 6,600 light-years away in the Hercules constellation.

“Because of the pristine view from Maunakea and KCRM’s remarkable depth of vision into the early universe, we have a new way for our galactic ancestors to reveal profound knowledge about our cosmic lineage and heritage,” says Rich Matsuda, interim director of Keck Observatory.

KCRM is designed to investigate the mysteries surrounding the era after the Big Bang when the cosmos was a toddler and light from the first stars transitioned the universe from darkness to light. This period of time is called the Epoch of Reionization (hence, KCRM’s name), when the first stars and galaxies began to form, emitting radiation powerful enough to burn through the dark, dense fog of cool hydrogen gas that filled the universe.

“Our understanding of the formation of the first galaxies and how they quickly evolved is incomplete,” says John OʻMeara, chief scientist at Keck Observatory. “With KCRM, we’ll be able to take direct measurements of the first galaxies that are at the edge of emergence from the Epoch of Reionization, just as they’ve started to mature after being born in the early chapters of the universe’s history.”


A googly-eyed KCWI, posing as Thomas the Train’s lookalike and getting ready to return to the Keck II Telescope after having KCRM installed in it. Credit: C. Martin, Caltech


KCRM is a major upgrade to the Keck Cosmic Web Imager (KCWI), which was commissioned in 2017; together, they can take images in wavelengths of light that our eyes can see, with KCWI covering the blue side of the visible spectrum (wavelengths ranging from 350 to 560 nanometers) and KCRM covering the red side (wavelengths ranging from 560 to 1080 nanometers). Having both a blue arm and a red arm gives the combined instrument highly-advanced viewing power to not only travel back in time some 10 to 12 billion years ago and observe objects during the Epoch of Reionization, but also capture images of the vast strands of gas that stretch out across the universe connecting galaxies, called the cosmic web.

“I envisioned this instrument as a two-armed imaging spectrograph back in 2007, based on our Palomar Cosmic Web Imager but it was a long road to get the funding so we split the instrument into two halves,” says Christopher Martin, the instrument’s principal investigator and a professor of physics at Caltech. “KCWI was already doing phenomenal science with one arm tied behind its back, so now it’s off to the races! It is fitting that our first-light image shows two ‘arms’ of the Turtle Nebula! We would not have made it without the work of our fantastic instrument team, and support from Caltech, the Keck Observatory, the National Science Foundation, and a generous anonymous donor.”

The first-light image of NGC 6210 is a testament to the power of KCRM and KCWI; Martin says they captured the turtle-shaped nebula within about 5 minutes of observation and with such detail, the stubby ‘arms’ can be seen protruding from its ‘shell.’


The Keck Cosmic Web Imager (KCWI) and its recently installed partner, the Keck Cosmic Reionization Mapper (KCRM), have obtained a spectrographic image of the Turtle Nebula, or NGC 6210, a complex planetary nebula created by a hot, dying star (that may in fact be a triple star system) that has blown off its envelope. The star is exciting the nebula gas with radiation from its recently unveiled hot inner core. Panel “a” shows the KCWI+KCRM image of the nebula’s hot inner core in three emission lines, coded by colors (blue, green, red) as seen in panels “c,” “d,” and “e.” Panel “b” shows the outer portion of the nebula captured by KCWI/KCRM, including two extended, faint filaments (“arms” of the turtle). The spectrum of the nebula is shown at right, extending over the full 350 to 1,000 nanometer optical wavelength range of the instruments. More than 80 individual spectral lines from many elements in the periodic table can be seen. Credit: C. Martin, Caltech/Keck Observatory


In addition to studying the first galaxies and the cosmic web, both instruments can also observe gas jets around young stars, winds of dead stars, supermassive black holes, dark matter, and more.

“I’m excited to finally study galaxies in enough detail to understand why gas flows out,” says Rosalie McGurk, staff astronomer and KCRM lead at Keck Observatory. “KCRM will take my studies of merging galaxies, their supermassive black holes, and their outflowing gas to new heights. Studying them in multiple wavelength ranges simultaneously will help us determine whether energy from active black holes or star formation is pushing the gas out of the galaxies.”

With its KCRM upgrade now complete thanks to engineering teams from Caltech, UCO/Lick Observatory, and Keck Observatory, KCWI will be available again for science use starting in August.

 

Members of the KCRM team on the first day of their first-light observing run. Front (L-R): Rosalie McGurk of Keck Observatory, Nikolaus Prusinski of Caltech, and Greg Doppmann of Keck Observatory. Back (L-R): Don Neill, Chris Martin, and Rob Bertz of Caltech. Credit: Keck Observatory
 




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 enables studies of the connection between galaxies and the gas in their dark matter halos, stellar relics, star clusters, and lensed galaxies. KCWI covers the blue side of the visible spectrum; the instrument also features the Keck Cosmic Reionization Mapper (KCRM), extending KCWI’s coverage to the red side of the visible spectrum. The combination of KCWI-blue and KCRM provides simultaneous high-efficiency spectral coverage across the entire visible spectrum. Support for KCWI-blue was provided by the National Science Foundation, Heising-Simons Foundation, and Mt. Cuba Astronomical Foundation. Support for KCRM was provided by the National Science Foundation and Mt. Cuba Astronomical Foundation.  
 
About W. Keck Observatory
 
The W. 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.


Monday, June 12, 2023

Astronomers are Reducing Satellite Interference in Hubble Images

Example of Satellite Trail in Hubble Space Telescope Exposure
Credits: Science: NASA, ESA, STScI




Artificial satellites are photobombing the Hubble Space Telescope's snapshots as much as every two to four hours, according to researchers at Baltimore's Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI).

As they whirl around Earth, the satellites leave streaks across an image, like scratches on photographic film. Hubble is in a low-Earth orbit and so many satellites in higher orbits sweep overhead. As many as 8,000 satellites circle Earth – more than half for telecommunications.

But not to worry — experts say that they are not a threat to the celebrated telescope's ongoing observations of the universe.

"We developed a new tool to identify satellite trails that is an improvement over the previous satellite software because it is much more sensitive. So we think it will be better for identifying and removing satellite trails in Hubble images," said Dave Stark of STScI.

Stark applied the new tool, based on the image analysis technique known as the Radon Transform, to identify satellite trails across Hubble's camera with the widest field of view, the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS).

In 2002 the satellite streaks were present in five percent of ACS exposures, with many of those too faint to discern easily. This rose to ten percent by 2022, although the typical brightness of the detected trails remained unchanged.

As the number of artificial satellites encircling Earth rises, sky contamination for all telescopes based on the ground or in Earth orbit becomes increasingly worse.

"To date, these satellite trails have not had a significant impact on research with Hubble," said Tom Brown, Head of STScI's Hubble Mission Office. "The cosmic rays that strike the telescope's detectors are a bigger nuisance."

Radiation from space hits the ACS electronic detectors on every exposure, leaving streaks. These are easy to identify from exposure to exposure. The same holds true for artificial satellites. "The average width I measured for satellites was 5 to 10 pixels. The ACS' widest view is 4,000 pixels across, so a typical trail will affect less than 0.5% of a single exposure. So not only can we flag them, but they don't impact the majority of pixels in individual Hubble images. Even as the number of satellites increases, our tools for cleaning the pictures will still be relevant," said Stark.

A Hubble science observation is assembled from a collection of multiple exposures on the same celestial target. So a satellite streaking across the sky can appear in one frame and not the next consecutive frame. Stark and collaborators developed a masking routine that identifies where the bad pixels are, the extent to which they affect the image, and then flags them. '"When we flag them, we should be able to recover the full field of view without a problem, after combining the data from all exposures," said Stark.

The Radon Transform software tool Stark used is applied in other sciences as well, such as reconstructing images from medical CT scans, and reconstructing a map of a planet's polar regions gleaned from a spacecraft. The software is ideal for identifying and characterizing linear features in an image because it sums up all the light along every possible straight path across an image. This approach combines all the light from a satellite trail, making them "pop out" in the transformed image, even many of those that are very faint in the original image.

Previous studies regarding Hubble do not pick up the fainter satellite trails. The new software is up to ten times more sensitive than prior software developed by STScI to detect satellite trials, and it identifies roughly twice as many trails as other studies.

"We have a toolbox of things that people use to clean Hubble data and calibrate it. And our new application is another tool that will help us make the best out of every Hubble exposure," said Stark.

The STScI team's researchis being presented at the 242nd meeting of the American Astronomical Societyin Albuquerque, New Mexico. The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Maryland, conducts Hubble and Webb science operations. STScI is operated for NASA by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, in Washington, D.C.




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Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland

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Friday, June 09, 2023

If dark matter is fuzzy, then how fuzzy is it? - A gravitational lens has the answer


Figure 1:
Schematic of the gravitational lens system MG J0751+2716. The long, thin gravitational arcs that we observe reveal information on the gravitational landscape of the lens galaxy, and hence properties of the dark matter.  Visualization: Robert Schulz (ASTRON, U. Leiden). VLBI data: Spingola et al. 2018. Source reconstruction: Powell et al. 2022.


Dark matter, which makes up over 80% of the mass in the Universe, does not absorb or emit light, interacting with light and normal (baryonic) matter only through its gravitational pull. The nature of dark matter is one of the major open questions in astrophysics and cosmology. One theoretical model for dark matter, known as fuzzy dark matter (FDM), is predicted to leave a very specific imprint on light that is bent around a massive galaxy in a phenomenon called gravitational lensing. By examining the radio light in a gravitational lens system observed at extremely high angular resolution, we have determined just how “fuzzy” the dark matter can be.

In the quest to discover the nature of dark matter, many different theoretical models have been proposed. Most of these involve a new type of fundamental particle that interacts with other matter only through gravity. Particles with different masses are predicted to influence the small-scale distribution of the dark matter on galactic scales. For instance, cold dark matter (CDM) with a very massive particle would produce many compact, low-mass clumps of dark matter orbiting every galaxy. In the opposite extreme, an ultra-light dark matter particle (ULDM), commonly called fuzzy dark matter (FDM), is predicted to produce a very blobby, wavy distribution of dark matter in every galaxy.

Gravitational lensing is one of the most promising ways to probe the nature of dark matter. As light from a distant source is bent around a lens galaxy in-between, we see several magnified and distorted copies of the source image (see the figure 1). The small-scale distribution of dark matter, which can be thought of as a “texture” in the gravitational lens, imprints a subtle signal on the lensed images that can be observed, if the observation is sensitive enough. In a lens galaxy containing fuzzy dark matter, this effect is similar to a pane of glass with a wavy pattern molded into it – the kind that is used in bathroom windows. It allows light to pass through, but distorts the image so that we cannot clearly see what is on the other side. By looking for the presence (or absence) of such subtle wavy distortions in the light passing through a gravitational lens, we can infer the mass of the dark matter particle. In fuzzy dark matter theories, a lighter particle produces a “fuzzier” lens, so we can use a gravitational lens observation to place a lower bound on the particle mass.

Our ability to see this fuzzy texture in the density of gravitational lens galaxies is limited by the angular resolution of the observation, or equivalently the size of the smallest features we can make out on the sky. Therefore, we get the best sensitivity to the dark matter particle mass by observing a gravitational lens system at the highest angular resolution possible. We achieve this using very long baseline interferometry (VLBI), a radio astronomy technique that combines signals from radio antennas all across the Earth. For this work, we used a VLBI observation of the gravitationally lensed radio jet MG J0751+2716 with an angular resolution of just 5 milli-arcseconds, or roughly one millionth of a degree. In the VLBI images, we can see the long, thin gravitational arcs that are perfect for searching for the small-scale gravitational perturbations that would be imprinted by fuzzy dark matter.

Figure 2:
Examples of different fuzzy lens models from our analysis. The color maps in the top row show the density of the gravitational lens, with the gravitational arcs of lensed radio light shown in orange. The bottom panels show the corresponding source images inferred for each lens model.  The mass of the dark matter particle increases from left to right. A dark matter particle that is too light produces a very fuzzy lens (left column), and the data cannot be explained without a physically unrealistic source. This model is therefore assigned a low likelihood. © MPA


So, if dark matter is fuzzy, then just how fuzzy is it?

We generate many thousands of simulated fuzzy gravitational lenses with different dark matter particle masses (see figure 2). For each of these fuzzy lens models, we compute the likelihood that that such a lens could have produced the observed data. By computing thousands of these likelihoods over a range of proposed particle masses, we infer the probability that the dark matter consists of a particle of a particular mass, given the observed data. If the lens model is too fuzzy, the reconstructed source image becomes physically unrealistic. As the particle mass increases, we reach a point where the data cannot distinguish a fuzzy lens from a perfectly smooth lens model. We find that with 95% certainty, a mass of a fuzzy dark matter particle is not lower than of 4∙10-21 eV. This work demonstrates the power of high-resolution VLBI observations to probe the nature of dark matter using strong gravitational lenses. Fuzzy dark matter is just one of many different theoretical models for dark matter. In future work we will use VLBI observations of gravitational lenses to constrain other dark matter models, including warm dark matter (WDM) and self-interacting dark matter (SIDM).

Author:

Devon Powell
Postdoc
2328

dmpowell@mpa-garching.mpg.de

Original publication:

Devon M. Powell, Simona Vegetti, J. P. McKean, Simon D.M. White, Elisa G. M. Ferreira, Simon May, Cristiana Spingola
A lensed radio jet at milli-arcsecond resolution II: Constraints on fuzzy dark matter from an extended gravitational arc
Submitted to MNRAS Letters

Source

Thursday, June 08, 2023

Signature of Very Massive First Stars Recorded in a Milky Way Star


Figure 1:
Artist's rendition of massive, luminous first-generation stars in the Universe which would form a cluster. The most massive ones should have exploded and ejected material providing heavy elements in the surrounding gas clouds. A high resolution image is
here (2.6 MB). (Credit: NAOC)

Astronomers have discovered a star on the outskirts of the Milky Way Galaxy with a chemical composition unlike anything they have ever seen. It matches theoretical expectations for the chemical footprint left behind by very massive, very early stars. This is the clearest evidence yet that the first stars included very massive star.

What is the nature of the first stars formed in the Universe? This is one of the most important questions in understanding how stars, galaxies, and the large-scale structures of the Universe formed after the Big Bang (Note 1). The first stars were born from gas clouds containing only hydrogen and helium, and nuclear fusion inside stars and supernova explosions have created new elements, the first steps in the formation of a diverse world of matter.

Theories predict that the first stars may have included many very massive stars that are rarely seen in the current Universe. Stars exceeding 140 times the mass of the Sun may have changed the environment of the Universe with intense ultraviolet radiation, and may have had a significant impact on the formation of the next generation of stars by very energetic supernovae (Pair-Instability Supernovae: PISNe) (Note 2).

However, there is a lack of clear observational evidence for the existence of such supernovae caused by very massive stars. Great efforts have been made to observe very old stars in the Milky Way Galaxy, along with observations of distant galaxies and intergalactic matter. Some of the old stars were born from gas clouds that captured elements ejected by the first stars, and their chemical compositions record the material produced by the first supernovae. Since PISNe caused by very massive stars produce chemical compositions that are very different from those of ordinary core-collapse supernovae, we can expect to identify the signature of very massive stars among old stars (Note 3).

A team of astronomers from the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ), the National Astronomical Observatories of China (NAOC), and other institutes have conducted studies using the Chinese survey telescope LAMOST to identify early generation stars in the Milky Way Galaxy and measured their detailed chemical compositions using the Subaru Telescope (Note 4). Among them, they have discovered LAMOST J101051.9+235850.2 (hereafter J1010+2358) with characteristic chemical compositions produced by a pair-instability supernova (Figures 2 and 3). This is the clearest trace of such supernovae found to date, and strongly supports the theory that stars that have masses more than 140 times larger than the mass of the Sun certainly formed in the early Universe.


Figure 2:
An optical image of LAMOST J101051.9+235850.2 taken from SDSS. This star exists in the direction of the constellation Leo with a distance of 3000 light-years. This is a main-sequence star with a mass slightly smaller than the mass of the Sun. (Credit: SDSS/NAOJ)



Figure 3:
Elemental abundances of LAMOST J101051.9+235850.2 (red circles) and predictions from supernova models (lines). The upper panel shows a comparison with the supernova model for a progenitor with 10 solar masses, which does not explain the observation. The middle shows a comparison with a 85 solar mass model, which is still insufficient to explain elements like Na, Mg, Mn and Co. The bottom shows a comparison with the pair-instability model for a very massive star with 260 solar masses, which best explains the observation. (Credit: NAOC)


"The peculiar odd-even variance, along with deficiencies of sodium and α-elements in this star, are consistent with the prediction of primordial PISN from first-generation stars with 260 solar masses," says Dr. XING Qianfan, first author of the study.

The discovery of J1010+2358 is direct evidence of the hydrodynamical instability due to electron–positron pair production in the theory of very massive star evolution. The creation of electron–positron pairs reduces thermal pressure inside the core of a very massive star and leads to a partial collapse.

"It provides an essential clue to constraining the initial mass function in the early universe," says Prof. ZHAO Gang, corresponding author of the study. "Before this study, no evidence of supernovae from such massive stars has been found in the metal-poor stars."

Professor AOKI Wako of the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, who has been leading the observing programs with the Subaru Telescope in the collaboration, says, "Our team has been working for nearly 10 years to study stars found by LAMOST in detail using the Subaru Telescope. Searching for evidence of the existence of very massive stars, which is thought to be unique to first stars, has been a challenge we have been working on for many years. We have achieved this major goal by this study."

What percentage of the first stars were very massive? This is the next big question that needs to be answered, and to do so, we need to explore many more stars and measure their chemical compositions.


Movie: Message from Professor AOKI Wako of the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, who has been leading the observing programs with the Subaru Telescope in the collaboration. (Credit: NAOJ)

These results appeared as Xing et al. "A metal-poor star with abundances from a pair instability supernova" in Nature on June 7, 2023.

Notes:

(Note 1) Starting from initial non-uniform distributions (i.e., inhomogeneities) in the dark matter density that existed in the Universe after the Big Bang, matter increasingly gathers in areas of high density due to the effect of gravitational forces. The first stars would have formed in regions with the highest density of matter.

(Note 2) Previous observations with the Subaru Telescope have also found stars with peculiar compositions that cannot be explained by ordinary core collapse supernovae (Note 3), suggesting the existence of very massive stars, but there were still problems that could not be explained by theoretical models of supernovae. (Subaru Telescope August 21, 2014 Press Release)

(Note 3) At the end of their evolution, massive stars with masses dozens of times greater than the mass of the Sun undergo a supernova explosion with the collapse of the central part to form a black hole or neutron star (core collapse supernova). They eject a wide variety of elements ranging from carbon to iron. On the other hand, massive stars with masses 140 times greater than the mass of the Sun become so hot at their centers that they collapse to form electron-positron pairs, which explode in runaway nuclear fusion (pair-instability supernovae). Furthermore, when the mass of a star exceeds 300 times the mass of the Sun, even runaway nuclear fusion cannot stop the star’s gravitational collapse, and it is believed that the star becomes a black hole without an explosion.

(Note 4) The team searched for low metal stars using the survey telescope. LAMOST J101051.9+235850.2 is one of the stars that had been suggested to have a unique composition during the LAMOST search. The detailed chemical composition was successfully determined from the high-resolution spectrum obtained with HDS on the Subaru Telescope.

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Wednesday, June 07, 2023

NASA Looks Back at 50 Years of Gamma-Ray Burst Science


Astronomers think a long GRB (gamma-ray burst) arises from a massive star when its core collapses, forming a black hole. In this artist's concept, particle jets powered by matter falling toward the black hole race outward at nearly the speed of light from a doomed star. To detect a GRB, one of these jets must point toward Earth. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab


NASA Looks Back at 50 Years of Gamma-Ray Burst Science

Fifty years ago, on June 1, 1973, astronomers around the world were introduced to a powerful and perplexing new phenomenon called GRBs (gamma-ray bursts). Today sensors on orbiting satellites like NASA’s Swift and Fermi missions detect a GRB somewhere in the sky about once a day on average. Astronomers think the bursts arise from catastrophic occurrences involving stars in distant galaxies, events thought to produce new black holes.


Watch: Our Traveler unwisely decides to visit a gamma-ray burst for their next vacation and learns the basics of these extraordinary blasts. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Check out more of the Traveler's cosmic adventures at NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio

“I can still remember the excitement when gamma-ray bursts were discovered,” said Charles Meegan, a research scientist at the University of Alabama, Huntsville, who helped develop GRB detectors on NASA’s Compton and Fermi satellites. “I was a graduate student then, unaware that the study of these strange events would be my career for the next 50 years.”


The Hubble Space Telescope’s Wide Field Camera 3 revealed the infrared afterglow (circled) of the BOAT GRB and its host galaxy, seen nearly edge-on as a sliver of light extending from the afterglow's upper left. The burst occurred about 2 billion light-years away. Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, A. Levan (Radboud University); Image Processing: Gladys Kobe


Artist’s rendering of Vela 5B in orbit around Earth.
Credit: Los Alamos National Laboratory



NASA's Compton Gamma Ray Observatory drifts away from the space shuttle Atlantis on April 7, 1991, following its deployment during the STS-37 mission. Compton's successful career ended in June 2000 when the observatory re-entered Earth's atmosphere. Credit: NASA/Ken Cameron


Far-Flung Flare-Ups

With GRBs, just about everything is extreme. They occur so far beyond our galaxy that even the closest-known burst exploded more than 100 million light-years away. Each burst produces an initial pulse of gamma rays, the highest-energy form of light, that typically lasts from milliseconds to minutes. This emission comes from a jet of particles moving close to the speed of light launched in our direction, and the closer we are to looking straight down the barrel, the brighter it appears. Following this prompt emission is a fading afterglow of gamma rays, X-rays, ultraviolet, visible, infrared, and radio light that astronomers may be able to track for hours to months.

Even half a century on, GRBs offer up surprises. One recent burst was so bright it temporarily blinded most of the gamma-ray detectors in space. Nicknamed the BOAT (for brightest of all time), the 7-minute blast may have been the brightest GRB in the past 10,000 years. It also showed that scientists’ most promising models of these events are nowhere near complete.

Nuke Watchers

The GRB story begins in October 1963, when a treaty signed by the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Soviet Union prohibiting the testing of nuclear weapons in the atmosphere, under water, or in space went into effect. To ensure compliance, the U.S. Air Force had been managing an unclassified research and development effort to detect nuclear tests from space. A week after the treaty went into effect, the first two of these satellites, called Vela (from the Spanish “to watch”), began their work.

Launched in pairs, the Vela satellites carried detectors designed to sense the initial flash of X-rays and gamma rays from nuclear explosions. Sometimes they triggered on events that clearly were not nuclear tests, and scientists collected and studied these observations. With improved instruments on the four Vela 5 and 6 satellites, Ray Klebesadel at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, together with his colleagues Ian Strong and Roy Olsen, determined directions to 16 confirmed gamma-ray events well enough to rule out Earth and the Sun as sources. They published a paper announcing the discovery in The Astrophysical Journal on June 1, 1973.

Using a detector aboard the IMP 6 satellite intended to study solar flares, Tom Cline and Upendra Desai at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, quickly confirmed the Vela findings.

Breakthroughs: BATSE & BeppoSAX

While theorists proposed 100 models in an effort to explain GRBs – most involving neutron stars in our own galaxy – observational progress was slow despite the growing number of detections by different spacecraft. Gamma rays can’t be focused like visible light or X-rays, making precise localizations quite difficult. Without them, it was impossible to search for GRB counterparts in other wavelengths using larger telescopes in space or on the ground.

In 1991, NASA launched the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory, which included an instrument named BATSE (Burst and Transient Science Experiment) dedicated to exploring GRBs. Developed at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, by a team that included Meegan, BATSE was about 10 times more sensitive than previous GRB detectors. Over Compton’s nine-year mission, BATSE detected 2,704 bursts, which gave astronomers a rich set of observations made with the same instrument.

In its first year, BATSE data showed that bursts were distributed all over the sky instead of in a pattern that reflected the structure of our Milky Way galaxy. “This suggested that they were coming from distant galaxies, and that meant they were more energetic than most scientists thought possible,” Meegan said.

Around the same time, Chryssa Kouveliotou, another member of the BATSE team, led an effort to classify the bursts. The team found that burst durations clustered into two broad groups – one lasting less than two seconds, the other lasting longer than two seconds – and that short bursts produced higher-energy gamma rays than long ones.

“So both temporal and spectral properties agreed in identifying two separate groups of GRBs: short and long,” said Kouveliotou, who now chairs the department of physics at George Washington University. “Soon after, theorists associated long GRBs with the collapse of massive stars and short ones with binary neutron star mergers.”

The next step in understanding came with watershed observations from the Italian-Dutch satellite BeppoSAX. Although not specifically designed as a GRB mission, its mix of instruments – including a gamma-ray monitor and two wide-field X-ray cameras – proved a boon to the field.

When a burst occurred in the field of view of one of the X-ray cameras, the spacecraft could locate it well enough over a couple of hours that additional instruments could be brought to bear. Whenever BeppoSAX turned to a GRB’s position, its instruments found a rapidly fading and previously unknown high-energy source – the X-ray afterglow theorists had predicted. These positions enabled large ground-based observatories to discover long GRB afterglows in visible light and radio waves, and also permitted the first distance measurements, confirming that GRBs were truly far-away events.

Artist's concept of NASA's Swift satellite at work.
Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/Chris Smith (KBRwyle)

Need for Speed

In 2000, NASA launched HETE 2, a small satellite designed to detect and localize GRBs. It was the first mission to compute accurate positions onboard and quickly – in tens of seconds – communicate them to the ground so other observatories could study early afterglow phases. The burst it discovered on March 29, 2003, also exhibited definitive supernova characteristics, confirming a suspected relationship between the two phenomena.

What took BeppoSAX a couple of hours, NASA’s Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory, launched in 2004, can do in about a minute. “We named it Swift for a reason,” said Goddard’s S. Bradley Cenko, the mission’s current principal investigator. “Its rapid, automated response allowed us to detect flares and other features in X-ray afterglows not previously seen.”

Following up on GRBs detected by these missions confirmed that long bursts were associated with the star-forming regions of galaxies and were often accompanied by supernovae. In May 2005, Swift was able to pinpoint the first afterglow of a short GRB, showing that these blasts occur in regions with little star formation. This bolstered the model of short bursts as mergers of neutron stars, which can travel far from their birth place over the many millions of years it takes for them to crash together.

In 2008, NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope joined Swift in hunting GRBs and has observed about 3,500 to date. Its GBM (Gamma-ray Burst Monitor) and Large Area Telescope allow the detection and follow-up of bursts from X-rays to the highest-energy gamma rays detected in space – an energy span of 100 million times. This has enabled the discovery of afterglow gamma rays with billions of times the energy of visible light.


In this artist's concept, pale concentric arcs illustrate gravitational waves produced as orbiting neutron stars merged. The event also formed near-light-speed particle jets that emitted gamma rays. In 2017, both signals were detected from the same source for the first time. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/CI Lab

The Next Revolution

In 2017, Fermi and the European INTEGRAL satellite linked a short GRB to a source of gravitational waves, ripples in space-time produced as orbiting neutron stars spiraled inward and merged. This was an important first that connected two different cosmic “messengers,” gravity and light. While astronomers haven’t seen another “gravity and light” burst since, they hope more will turn up in current and future observing runs of gravitational wave observatories.

“We’re building new satellites with greater sensitivity to delve more deeply into this phenomenon, so the future of GRB science is bright,” said Marshall’s Dan Kocevski, a member of the Fermi GBM team and the principal investigator for StarBurst, a small satellite designed to explore GRBs from neutron star mergers. Other missions include Glowbug, part of an experiment package launched to the International Space Station in March and led by J. Eric Grove at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory in Washington; BurstCube, led by Goddard’s Jeremy Perkins and slated for launch in early 2024; MoonBEAM, which would orbit between Earth and the Moon and is led by Marshall’s Chiumun Michelle Hui; and LEAP, designed to study GRB jets from the space station, led by Mark McConnell at the University of New Hampshire, Durham.

And as gravitational and gamma-ray facilities both improve their reach, a new chapter of the GRB story will open.

“What will completely revolutionize our understanding of GRBs,” said Alessandra Corsi, an associate professor at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, “will be the ability to track them back to when the universe was most intensely forming stars, around 10 billion years ago. This part of the universe will be probed by the next generation of gravitational wave detectors – 10 times more sensitive than what we currently have – and by future gamma-ray missions that can ensure continuity with the fantastic science Swift and Fermi have enabled.”

By Francis Reddy
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.

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NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
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Editor: Francis Reddy



Tuesday, June 06, 2023

Early Universe Crackled With Bursts of Star Formation, Webb Shows

JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey (NIRCam Image)
Credits: Image: 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)




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 are 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 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 CSA (Canadian Space Agency).



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Monday, June 05, 2023

Under the Sea


A spiral galaxy that is tilted partially toward us. Its inner disc is bright and colourful, with bluish and reddish spots of star formation throughout the arms. An outer disc of pale, dim dust surrounds it. It has many arms, which are being pulled away from the disc, down and to the right. They stretch into long, faint trails that cross the image. The background is dark and mostly empty, with three bright stars. Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, M. Gullieuszik and the GASP team.
Hi-res image

The jellyfish galaxy JO206 trails across this image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, showcasing a colourful star-forming disc surrounded by a pale, luminous cloud of dust. A handful of bright stars with criss-cross diffraction spikes stand out against an inky black backdrop at the bottom of the image. JO206 lies over 700 million light-years from Earth in the constellation Aquarius, and this image of the galaxy is the sixth and final instalment in a series of observations of jellyfish galaxies. Some of Hubble's other observations of these peculiar galaxies — which range from grandiose to ghostly — are available here.

Jellyfish galaxies are so-called because of their resemblance to their aquatic namesakes. In this image, the disc of JO206 is trailed by long tendrils of bright star formation that stretch towards the bottom right of this image, just as jellyfish trail tentacles behind them. The tendrils of jellyfish galaxies are formed by the interaction between galaxies and the intra-cluster medium, a tenuous superheated plasma that pervades galaxy clusters. As galaxies move through galaxy clusters they ram into the intracluster medium, which strips gas from the galaxies and draws it into the long tendrils of star formation.

The tentacles of jellyfish galaxies give astronomers a unique opportunity to study star formation under extreme conditions, far from the influence of the main disc of the galaxy. Surprisingly, Hubble revealed that there are no striking differences between star formation in the discs of jellyfish galaxies and star formation in their tentacles, which suggests the environment of newly-formed stars has only a minor influence on their formation.

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Friday, June 02, 2023

The Case of the Missing Jupiters: Gas Giant Planets are a No-Show around Small Red Stars

Artist conception of a Jupiter-like planet around a small red dwarf star. A new study shows that these systems are rare.
Credit: Melissa Weiss, CfA.
Hi-res Image

The dearth of Jupiters suggests that potentially habitable, Earth-like planets might not readily emerge around red dwarf stars.

Cambridge, Mass. – Astronomers have revealed that the smallest and most common kinds of stars in the universe, called red dwarfs, very rarely host big, Jupiter-like planets. This absence of Jupiter analogs could have major impacts on the development of Earth-like planets around red dwarfs and in the search for worlds capable of supporting alien life.

Befitting its distinction as the locally largest planet, Jupiter has played a dominant role in the evolution of our Solar System. Scientists think Jupiter ultimately set the stage for Earth becoming habitable, influencing our world's formation, size, and composition. Thus, the lack of hulking gas giants in red dwarf planetary systems suggests that any resident rocky worlds may not have evolved into particularly Earthly, life-friendly places.

"We have shown that the least massive stars don't have Jupiters, meaning Jupiter-mass planets that receive similar amounts of starlight as Jupiter receives from our Sun," says Emily Pass, a researcher at the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian  (CfA) and lead author of a new study to be published in The Astronomical Journal conveying the results. "While this discovery suggests truly Earth-like planets might be in short supply around red dwarfs, there still is so much we don't yet know about these systems, so we must keep our minds open."

The findings have additional importance because many red dwarfs are among our nearest cosmic neighbors. That proximity, coupled with the fact that cool, dim red dwarfs do not overwhelm their planets in glare, has established them as the most amenable targets for investigating the atmospheres of exoplanets—a key research priority now and for the next few decades.

"The pipsqueak red dwarf stars that we looked at for this study are our most immediate cosmic neighbors, which means their planets are ideal candidates for detailed examination by the James Webb Space Telescope," says study co-author David Charbonneau, a professor at Harvard University and a member of the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian. "But now that we have very strong evidence of cold gas giants like Jupiter and Saturn being exceedingly rare around these stars, the temperate rocky planets we end up studying could diverge greatly from our terrestrial expectations."

To gauge the frequency of Jupiter planets, Pass and colleagues examined an unprecedently large population of 200 small red dwarfs, each only 10% to 30% of the mass of the Sun. Such tiny red dwarfs are the cosmic norm, vastly outnumbering Sun-sized stars in our galaxy. The observations were gathered between 2016 and 2022 primarily from the Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory, located in Arizona, as well as the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile.

The researchers relied on the radial-velocity technique to suss out any large exoplanets in their stellar dataset. As planets orbit their host stars, the bodies' interacting gravities cause the stars to "wobble" ever so slightly, an effect discernible in detailed starlight readouts.

Across the entire sample of stars, the researchers did not detect a single Jupiter-equivalent planet. Based on inherent statistical uncertainties, the researchers can safely say that Jupiters occur in less than 2% of low-mass red dwarf planetary systems.

The findings starkly contrast with similar surveys of mid-sized stars like our Sun, which commonly sport massive planets at Jupiter-like distances. The tremendous masses of these worlds—Jupiter alone contains more mass than all the other planets put together—translates to tremendous gravity, and tremendous gravity translates to far-reaching influence on other celestial bodies.

"In the Solar System, Jupiter is the bully," says Charbonneau. "A lot of what makes Earth the way it is traces back to what Jupiter was doing in the early phases of the Solar System's history."

Among the most significant events is Jupiter's migration in the first few hundred million years of the Solar System's existence. After formation in the far reaches of the Solar System, Jupiter, along with the other outer planets, is theorized to have moved inward toward the Sun. In the process, hefty Jupiter's gravity scattered loads of ice-rich cometary bodies onto collision courses with the four rocky worlds in the inner Solar System.

As a large number of those icy bodies impacted on our young planet, they delivered copious amounts of water, potentially along with organic (carbon-containing) molecules. The waters pooled on our world's surface, creating the oceans, within which organic molecules are thought to have gone on to mix together for millions of years. Eventually, the molecules evolved complexity and began self-replicating, having transitioned to what we refer to as life.

Sans Jupiter, these conditions might not have come to be, and the journey to life might never have gotten underway.

Although the new findings do suggest that the circumstances that led to at least one world in our Solar System becoming habitable are not likely to be matched in solar systems hosted by tiny red stars, the door is far from closed when it comes to extraterrestrial life in these systems.

"We don't think that the absence of Jupiters necessarily means rocky planets around red dwarfs are uninhabitable," says Charbonneau.

The conspicuous absence of Jupiter-esque mega-planets means more raw material should be available for building up smaller, rocky bodies, because this material wasn't incorporated into Jupiter-like worlds. Indeed, other studies have shown that red dwarfs' solid worlds tend to be correspondingly larger in size than those around Sunlike stars.

Relatedly, rocky planets seem to form in greater numbers around red dwarfs versus Sunlike stars. For instance, the famous TRAPPIST-1 planet system packs seven rocky worlds into orbits much closer to the host red dwarf star than Mercury is to our Sun.

In a word, red dwarf planetary systems are just different from ours. And that difference could perhaps lead to rich habitability possibilities we have not yet realized.

"Our work implies that rocky worlds with masses similar to Earth and orbiting red dwarfs were born and raised in a very different environment from that of our own planet," says Pass. "We're excited to see what exactly that means as we forge ahead in remotely exploring the planets in our cosmic neighborhood."

Other members of the research team include Jennifer Winters (CfA and Williams College), Jonathan Irwin (CfA and the University of Cambridge, UK), and David Latham, Perry Berlind, Michael Calkins, Gilbert Esquerdo, and Jessica Mink (CfA).



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The Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian is a collaboration between Harvard and the Smithsonian designed to ask—and ultimately answer—humanity's greatest unresolved questions about the nature of the universe. The Center for Astrophysics is headquartered in Cambridge, MA, with research facilities across the U.S. and around the world.

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Thursday, June 01, 2023

Astronomers Capture Direct Image of Ancient Galaxy Recycling Gas to Make New Stars


Artist’s illustration of mammoth-1, a massive ancient galaxy recycling gas to sustain its growth in the early universe.
Credit: Tsinghua University


Maunakea, Hawaiʻi – Astronomers have found direct evidence showing ancient galaxies were able to sustain star formation by recycling gas from previous stars to birth new generations of stars. This recycled gas could have been enough to supply all the material needed for galaxies in the early universe to grow, shedding new light on the evolution of galaxies and stars.

The findings, which include data from two Maunakea Observatories on Hawaiʻi Island – W. M. Keck Observatory and Subaru Telescope – are published in the journal Science.

Gas provides the material galaxies need to form new stars. When stars die in supernova explosions, they can expel gas out of a galaxy. To continue forming stars, a galaxy requires a steady supply of gas streaming into it. But it has been unclear if star formation is driven by a supply of pristine new gas, which consists mostly of hydrogen with a little helium – among the lightest elements in the universe – or if galaxies are able to recycle the gas from previous generations of supernovae, which would contain heavier elements produced by nuclear fusion in stars.

To answer this question, an international team of researchers led by Tsinghua University snapped a direct image of MAMMOTH-1, a massive nebula in a galaxy cluster that existed 11 billion years ago.

Using Keck Observatory’s Keck Cosmic Web Imager (KCWI) and Subaru Telescope, the team detected signs of hydrogen, helium, and carbon extending out to 300,000 light-years around MAMMOTH-1. The ratios of the elements are similar to what is seen in the Sun today; this is surprising for such an ancient protogalaxy, whose composition is expected to more closely resemble the pristine state of new gas.




Artist’s animation depicting direct observations of recycled gas spiraling into the MAMMOTH-1 protogalaxy, fueling more star formation. Credit: Tsinghua University

 


The team was also able to map the motion of the gas, which showed the gas enriched with heavy elements is flowing back into the galaxy, delivering about 700 times the mass of the Sun in recycled gas each year. This amounts to much more than what is needed to fuel the star formation rate seen in MAMMOTH-1, which is about 81 times the mass of the Sun each year, thus indicating that the recycled gas alone is enough to sustain star formation in the protogalaxy. “Our observations give a first hint that recycled inflows might be an ubiquitous supply mechanism for massive star-forming galaxies in the early universe,” said Zheng Cai of Tsinghua University, the Principal Investigator of this study and co-author of the paper.



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 enables 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 National Science Foundation, Heising-Simons Foundation, and Mt. Cuba Astronomical Foundation.


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.