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Only one billion years after the Big Bang, clusters
of galaxies were already forming. This discovery
pushes back the age of the youngest known galaxy
cluster by a third, and shows that the largest
astronomical objects in the Universe had already
begun to form in one of the earliest epochs of
the Universe that astronomers have been able to
observe. This work was conducted by researchers
from the University of Tokyo, the National Astronomical
Observatory of Japan, and elsewhere using the
Subaru telescope.
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Galaxies often congregate to form clusters of galaxies.
At the present day, clusters have tens and hundreds
of member galaxies and are the largest astronomical
objects in the Universe. Knowing how they formed is
a key to understanding the past and future of the Universe.
To study how the Universe has changed
over large scales in space and time, it is essential to
observe deeply a wide area of the sky. A large number
of researchers are now studying the Subaru-XMM Deep Survey
Field (SXDS), an approximately one square degree area
of the sky in the direction of the constellation Cetus,
the Whale, at many wavelengths using several telescopes.
(Note 1)
To understand the origin of galaxy clusters,
Masami Ouchi, currently at the Space Telescope Science
Institute, decided to study how galaxies approximately
12.7 billion light years away (a red shift of 5.7) were
distributed in the SXDS. By using the color of galaxies
as a guide to their distance, Ouchi and his collaborators
found 515 galaxies in a volume 500 million light years
in height and width and 100 million light years in depth
in images from Subaru's prime focus camera (Suprime-Cam).
(Note 2)
Figure 1 shows a density
map of the galaxies in this volume as seen on the sky.
This map represents the physical structures in the Universe
at the farthest distances and the earliest times that
astronomers have been able to observe to date. The yellow
regions are where there are the highest concentration
of galaxies. (Note 3)
In the bottom portion of this map, the
researchers found a concentration of galaxies that could
not be explained by chance. By obtaining accurate distance
estimates to these galaxies using Subaru's Faint Object
Camera and Spectrograph (FOCAS),
the researchers confirmed that there were six galaxies
concentrated in a small volume only 3 million light years
in diameter, forming a galaxy cluster. Figure
2 identifies the six member galaxies of the cluster.
The cluster has several properties that
reveal its young age. It is one hundred times less massive
than present day galaxy clusters and has significantly
fewer members. Moreover, its member galaxies are producing
stars at one hundred times the rate of galaxies outside
the cluster.
The infant galaxy cluster existed at
a time when the Universe was only one billion years old.
The youngest portraits of galaxy clusters that astronomers
previously had were from the Universe at an age of one
and a half billion years. As any parent would attest,
young children change rapidly. The portrait of a galaxy
cluster at a younger age fills a significant gap in our
knowledge of the early history of the Universe when stars,
galaxies, and clusters were first forming.
"The fact that a cluster is already
forming so soon after the Big Bang puts strong constraints
on the fundamental structure of the Universe", says
Ouchi. The prevailing theory of cosmology postulates that
smaller mass structures form first and then grow into
more massive structures. "Our results seem to contradict
the prevailing wisdom, but the real challenge is in understanding
how well the distribution of visible matter such as galaxies
correlates with the distribution of mass in general. As
we continue to fill in the gaps in the early history of
clusters, we should be able to resolve such ambiguities",
he says.
These results were published in the February
10, 2005, edition of the Astrophysical Journal (ApJ 620,
L1-L4) and will be presented at the meeting "The
Future of cosmology with clusters of Galaxies" beginning
on February 26, 2005, in Waikoloa, Hawaii.