The Asian Age

Oxygen in distant galaxy points to early universe

- — Reuters

Astronomer­s provides insight into star formation in perhaps the most distant galaxy ever observed.

The scientists viewed the galaxy, called MACS1149JD­1, as it existed roughly 550 million years after the Big Bang, which gave rise to the universe about 13.8 billion years ago.

After detecting a whiff of oxygen, astronomer­s have determined that stars in a faraway galaxy formed 250 million years after the Big Bang — a rather short time in cosmic terms - in a finding that sheds light on conditions in the early universe.

Their research, published on Wednesday, provides insight into star formation in perhaps the most distant galaxy ever observed. The scientists viewed the galaxy, called MACS1149- JD1, as it existed roughly 550 million years after the Big Bang, which gave rise to the universe about 13.8 billion years ago.

Light emitted by MACS1149- JD1 travelled 13.28 billion light years before reaching Earth. Looking across such distances lets scientists peer back in time. A light- year is the distance light travels in a year, 5.9 trillion miles ( 9.5 trillion km).

The detection of oxygen in MACS1149- JD1 was particular­ly instructiv­e. The universe initially was devoid of elements such as oxygen, carbon and nitrogen, which were first created in the fusion furnaces of the earliest stars and then spewed into interstell­ar space when these stars reached their explosive deaths.

The presence of oxygen showed that an even earlier generation of stars had formed and died in MACS1149- JD1 and that star formation in that galaxy began about 250 million years after the Big Bang when the u niverse was only about 2 percent of its current age, the re archers said. The oxygen in MACS1149JD­1 was the most distant ever detected.

“Prior to our study, there were only theoretica­l prediction­s of the earliest star formation. We have for the first time observed the very early stage of star formation in the universe,” said astronomer Takuya Hashimoto of Osaka Sangyo University in Japan.

The study marked another step forward as scientists hunt for evidence of the first stars and galaxies that emerged from what had been total darkness in the aftermath of the Big Bang, a time sometimes called “cosmic dawn”.

“With these observatio­ns, we are pushing back the limit of the observable universe and, therefore, we are coming closer to the cosmic dawn,” University College London astronomer Nicolas

Laporte said, adding that computer simulation­s suggest that the first stars appeared around 150 million years after the Big Bang.

The researcher­s confirmed the distance of the galaxy with observatio­ns from ground- based telescopes in Chile and reconstruc­ted the earlier history of MACS1149- JD1 using infrared data from orbiting telescopes.

The detection of oxygen in MACS1149- JD1 was particular­ly instructiv­e. The universe initially was devoid of elements such as oxygen, carbon and nitrogen.

 ??  ?? The presence of oxygen showed that an even earlier generation of stars had formed and died in MACS1149- JD1 and that star formation in that galaxy began about 250 million years after the Big Bang when the universe was only about 2 per cent of its...
The presence of oxygen showed that an even earlier generation of stars had formed and died in MACS1149- JD1 and that star formation in that galaxy began about 250 million years after the Big Bang when the universe was only about 2 per cent of its...

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