Arab Times

Astronomer­s peer closer than ever to ‘cosmic dawn’

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Astronomer­s have observed a galaxy a very dstant 13.28 billion lightyears away, zooming in closer than ever to the “cosmic dawn” of the Universe’s first stars, they said Wednesday.

Pinpointin­g this period of star birth — which gave rise to oxygen, carbon and other elements in the Universe — is a holy grail for astronomer­s chasing down the beginning of everything.

Now, thanks to data from the Atacama Large Millimetre/Submillime­tre Array (ALMA) and the European Southern Observator­y’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) — both in Chile — they are a step closer.

The new details revealed that light from a galaxy dubbed MACS1149-JD1 was 13.28 billion lightyears old, an internatio­nal team reported in the scientific journal Nature.

This means astronomer­s were looking at the galaxy just 500 million years after the Big Bang — when the Universe was about 3.5 percent of its current age.

“It is one of the first galaxies of the Universe,” study co-author Nicolas Laporte of University College London (UCL) told AFP.

Crucially, some stars in the ancient galaxy were already “mature”, implying they had been around much longer — another 250 million years or so.

“The mature stellar population in MACS1149JD­1 implies that stars were forming back to even earlier times, beyond what we can currently see with our telescopes,” said Laporte.

“This has very exciting implicatio­ns for finding ‘cosmic dawn’ when the first galaxies emerged,” he added.

The study authors conclude “it may be possible to detect such early episodes of star formation in similar galaxies with future telescopes.”

The real breakthrou­gh was the detection of oxygen in the galaxy, which is observable in the Leo constellat­ion, though not with the naked eye.

“Oxygen is only created in stars and then released into the gas clouds in galaxies when those stars die,” said a UCL statement.

“The presence of oxygen in MACS1149-JD1 therefore indicates that a previous generation of stars had already formed and died at an even earlier time.”

MACS1149-JD1 is the most distant known galaxy with a precise distance measuremen­t, said the researcher­s.

Another galaxy, GN-z11, is estimated to be 13.4 billion light years away based on observatio­ns with the Hubble Space Telescope, but those measuremen­ts were not as precise, they added.

Spacewalki­ng astronauts carried out a highflying, high-tech version of musical chairs Wednesday, rearrangin­g pumps outside the Internatio­nal Space Station. Popping out early, NASA astronauts Drew

Feustel and Ricky Arnold quickly swapped the positions of two spare ammonia pumps that are part of the space station’s critical cooling system. (Agencies)

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