One of the oldest galaxies ever observed has revealed that dust played a vital role in the infancy of the Universe, astronomers reported on Monday.
Grains of dust are the tiny building blocks of the cosmos.
Made from carbon, silicon, magnesium, iron and oxygen, they are formed in the nuclear combustion of a star.
They are spewed into space when the star dies and explodes. Over aeons, clouds of dust and gas coalesce to form new star systems.
The theory is that in the fledgling Universe, gas must have formed the early galaxies as there was no dust to do the job.
But the new research suggests dust played its creative part at a much earlier point than thought.
Astronomers led by Darach Watson at the University of Copenhagen used Europe's mega-observatory, located in Chile's bone-dry Atacama desert, to observe a galaxy called A1689-zD1.
The light reaching Earth from this star cluster is truly ancient, they reported in the journal Nature.
The "redshift" -- a benchmark of time and distance -- suggests that the source is about 13.1 billion years old, or some 700 million years after the Universe was born in the "Big Bang."
Yet the light signature also points to a galaxy that despite its young age was rich in complex dust, similar even to that of much later galaxies such as our own Milky Way.
"It is the first time dust has been discovered in one of the most distant galaxies ever observed," said Watson.
"It is a galaxy of modest size, and yet it is already full of dust. This is very surprising and it tells us that ordinary galaxies were enriched with the heavier elements far faster than expected."
The redshift of A1689-zD1 is seven. Until now, the earliest galactic dust ever spotted had a redshift of 3.2, which equates to some 12.5 billion years ago.
The findings suggest that the galaxy was consistently forming stars by about 560 million years after the Big Bang, "a very short cosmological timeframe, given that most stars live for billions of years," said Watson.
The faint light from the galaxy was snared thanks to a phenomenon called gravitational lensing.
Its glimmer was magnified ninefold as it passed through a spectacular galaxy cluster called Abel 1689 on the way to Earth.
Source: AFP
GMT 14:11 2018 Tuesday ,11 December
Cosmonauts will use special water during long space missionsGMT 15:32 2018 Monday ,03 December
Russian spacecraft with new crew gets into near-Earth orbitGMT 16:21 2018 Tuesday ,27 November
Russia ranks fourth worldwide for number of scientistsGMT 13:32 2018 Monday ,19 November
Launch of first Jordanian nano- satellite dubbed (JYI-SAT) postponedGMT 11:12 2018 Thursday ,15 November
China Focus: Scientists warn of less water supply over melting glacier after 2060GMT 10:16 2018 Wednesday ,31 October
Emirati-made satellite "KhalifaSat" reinforces UAE’s stature in space arenaGMT 08:36 2018 Monday ,29 October
Israeli, Finnish scientists win 1 mln USD for innovation in alternative fuelsGMT 16:39 2018 Tuesday ,23 October
Failed launch of Soyuz-FG did not pause probe into hole in Soyuz MS-09 spacecraftMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor