|
|
|
Observation:
Object Name: High
Redshift Starburst Galaxy LAE J1044-0130
Telescope: Subaru Telescope / Prime
Focus
Instrument: Suprime-Cam
Filter: Narrow-band (816 nanometers)
Date: UT 2002 February 15-17
Exposure: 600 min
Field of View: 1 arcmin x 1 arcmin
Orientation: North up, east left
Position: RA(J2000.0)=10h44.5m, Dec(J2000.0)=
-1d31m (Sextant)
|
Explanation:
A collaboration led by astronomers from Tohoku University
in Japan has used Subaru Telescope to discover a galaxy
rapidly forming stars when the Universe was less than a
billion years old. Images and spectra from the Subaru and
Keck telescopes reveal that the galaxy has a high-speed
outflow of hydrogen gas believed to be caused by a massive
burst of star formation. The galaxy is more than 14 billion
light years from Earth, and is currently the most distant
galaxy known to harbor such a phenomenon. Studying such
distant galaxies is made possible by combining careful technique
and large telescopes, and is expected to reveal how galaxies
are born and evolve in the early stage of the Universe.
The newly discovered galaxy is so far away that the light
which is now reaching Earth began its journey 14 billion
years ago. Only large telescopes like Subaru can collect
enough light to observe these very faint and distant galaxies
to study what the Universe was like in its infancy. Because
the Universe is expanding, the light emitted from these
distant galaxies is stretched out to longer wavelengths
as it travels toward us, a phenomenon astronomers call redshift.
The further an object is from us, the greater its redshift.
Hoping to find star-forming galaxies at the farthest reaches
of the Universe, the team (including Tohoku
University graduate student Masaru Ajiki and associate
professor Yoshiaki Taniguchi, researchers at the National
Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ), the University
of Tokyo, the University of Hawaii, and the University of
Maryland) installed a special filter (NB816) into Subaru's
prime focus camera, Suprime-Cam, and observed a region
of sky about the size of the full moon around a distant
quasar named SDSSp J104433.04-012502.2 in the constellation
Sextant. Quasars are believed to be objects powered by black
holes about a billion times the mass of the Sun and, due
to their extreme luminosities, can be readily discovered
even at very large distances. The special filter was designed
to transmit only a very narrow color range of light around
800 nanometers which, for galaxies at the same distance
as the quasar, includes an emission line (called Lyman-alpha)
which is produced when gas is heated by vigorous star formation.
After a 10-hour observation in February 2002, more than
15 galaxies were discovered which could only be seen in
the image taken through the narrow filter. One of these
galaxies was then observed with Subaru's Faint
Object Camera and Spectrograph (FOCAS) in March 2002,
which confirmed that it was a very distant galaxy. Additional,
more detailed, observations with the Echellette Spectrograph
and Imager (ESI) on the Keck
II telescope supported the Subaru results and indicated
that hydrogen gas is flowing from the galaxy at speeds of
several hundred kilometers per second.
Stars more than about 10 times the mass of our Sun end their
lives in vast explosions called supernovae. When many such
stars are being formed in a short space of time, the combined
force of these explosions can cause gas to be ejected out
of the galaxy. Such an outflow, called a "superwind",
can be seen in the
nearby galaxy Messier 82. If the outflow seen in this
young galaxy is also produced by a superwind, it would be
the most distant example of this phenomenon yet discovered
and would mean that large-scale star formation must have
begun within several hundred million years after the start
of the Universe.
By discovering more distant galaxies and studying them in
detail, astronomers expect to learn what galaxies were like
when the Universe was very young, and understand how they
are born and evolve. Says Professor Taniguchi, "For
the past 15 years while Subaru was being planned and built,
Keiichi Kodaira [former Director of NAOJ and now President
of the Graduate
University for Advanced Studies] and I have had a dream
to look at distant galaxies, more than 10 billion light
years away. At last that dream has come true."
These results will be published in the September 1, 2002
issue of The Astrophysical Journal.
Figure 1 :
Thumbnail images and spectral energy distribution
of the galaxy, named LAE J1044-0130 (LAE stands for Lyman-alpha
emitter). The upper row shows images of the galaxy in
different filters and the middle row shows contour maps
of the images above them. The galaxy, at the center of
the circle, appears clearly in the image taken with the
special NB816 filter, but is barely detectable in the
other filters. The brighter object to the upper left of
the galaxy is a foreground galaxy only 7 billion light
years away. The lower panel plots the amount of light
detected in each filter in units of magnitude as a function
of wavelength. (Note that wavelengths of each filter do
not align with the image panels above.) This plot, called
the spectral energy distribution, shows that the galaxy
is brightest in the wavelength region of the special filter,
NB816.
Figure 2 : Spectra
of LAE J1044-0130 taken by FOCAS on the Subaru Telescope
on March 11, 2002 UT (upper panel) and March 13, 2002
UT (lower panel). The spectrum in the upper panel clearly
detects the emission line. In the higher resolution spectrum
in the lower panel, the line shows a slight broadening
on its longer wavelength side (right). This "red
wing" suggests the presence of superwinds in the
galaxy.
Figure 3 : Spectrogram
and spectra obtained with Keck II Telescope's ESI on March
15, 2002 UT. The spectrogram in the upper panel shows
emission as a function of wavelength and position along
a slit placed to detect light from the galaxy LAE J1044-0130
and the foreground galaxy. The galaxy LAE J1044-0130 is
particularly bright at a wavelength of 8130 angstroms.
The spectrum in the middle panel clearly shows the line
and its red wing. Comparing the spectrum in the middle
panel with the spectrum of the emission lines in the night
sky (OH air glow) in the bottom panel confirms that the
detection is real.
August 8, 2002 |