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A galaxy grouping called Stephan’s Quintet, which contains an imposter galaxy that is actually much closer to Earth than the
others. (Image credit: NASA, ESA, and the Hubble SM4 ERO Team)
Using the Hubble Space Telescope, a team of astronomers has used a tricky technique to
discover an elusive 11-billion-year-old galaxy. Rather than observe the light this realm emits,
they watched for the light it absorbs.
Just as we see a light bulb via the light it emits, astronomers usually observe galaxies using
the light their stars emit. Galaxies put out light waves found across the entire electromagnetic
spectrum, and different telescopes are able to observe these cosmic objects in different
wavelengths of light to form a full picture.
But, when a galaxy is located along the same line of sight as another, more distant, source of
bright light, there's another way to go about these galactic observations. As light passes
through a background galaxy toward a foreground galaxy, for instance, gas and dust in the
foreground galaxy will absorb some of the background one's wavelengths. And because
chemical elements absorb light at specific wavelengths, looking for gaps in the light output
— or spectra — from a background source can tell astronomers what that light had passed
through on its way to our telescopes. In other words, light in those "gaps" would've been
absorbed by a foreground object on the way to our vantage point.
One potentially useful background source for this technique are quasars, which are extremely
bright galactic hearts powered by supermassive black holes blasting out jets of radiation and
matter as they feast on surrounding material.
Related: Astronomers may have discovered the closest black holes to Earth
"To find absorbing galaxies, we first look for quasars that are particularly red," Johan Fynbo,
an astronomer at the Cosmic Dawn Center, said in a statement. "Because star dust tends to
absorb the blue light but not the red, if there is a dusty galaxy in the foreground, the quasar
will be reddened."
He and his team have spotted several absorbing galaxies by parsing light from reddened
quasars, but once this is done, they are faced with a much more challenging task: hunting for
light emitted by the absorbing galaxy itself.
This makes spotting an absorbing galaxy with its own light output akin to trying to spot a
firefly perched on the lamp of a lighthouse while standing onshore. While this might prove
too intimidating a challenge for many, however, Fynbo and colleagues relish it.
Unfortunately, the scientists haven’t yet identified the light coming from their recently-
uncovered, 11-billion-year-old absorbing galaxy, but the absorption patterns this object has
revealed are remarkable. The galaxy, seen as it was when our 13.8 billion-year-old universe
was only around 3 billion years old, is absorbing more light than other galaxies found in a
similar fashion, meaning it is likely a more mature galaxy such as the Milky Way.
"The features that we found in the missing light tell us something about the dust in the
foreground galaxy," Lise Christensen, a member of the discovery team and an astronomer at
the Cosmic Dawn Center, said in the statement. "In fact, the dust seems to resemble the dust
that we see locally in the Milky Way and one of our neighboring galaxies."
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The team was also able to determine that the galaxy has a bright counterpart. That galaxy,
which seems to be birthing stars at an intense rate, is so close to the absorber galaxy that the
team also believes the two are probably gravitationally bound. This means ,at some point
after they were noticed, the two galaxies likely formed a galaxy group similar to the local
group in which the Milky Way sits.
Fynbo intends to revisit this region of space with other instruments, including the Nordic
Optical Telescope at La Palma, to search for other members of this galactic group in the
hope he will be able to see the absorbing galaxy emit light of its own.
"This makes the galaxies even more interesting to study," the astronomer concluded.
The team’s research has been accepted for publication in the journal Astronomy &
Astrophysics. Meanwhile, a pre-peer review version is available on the research repository
arXiv.
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Robert Lea
Contributing Writer
Robert Lea is a science journalist in the U.K. whose articles have been published in Physics
World, New Scientist, Astronomy Magazine, All About Space, Newsweek and ZME Science.
He also writes about science communication for Elsevier and the European Journal of
Physics. Rob holds a bachelor of science degree in physics and astronomy from the U.K.’s
Open University. Follow him on Twitter @sciencef1rst.
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