First Light
of the Universe?
From the Spitzer
Space Telescope News Release
located at http://www.spitzer.caltech.edu/Media/releases/ssc2005-22/release.shtml
Scientists using NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope say they have detected
light that may be from the earliest objects in the universe. If confirmed,
the observation provides a glimpse of an era more than 13 billion years
ago when, after the fading embers of the theorized Big Bang gave way to
millions of years of pervasive darkness, the universe came alive.
This light could be from the very first stars or perhaps from hot gas falling
into the first black holes. The science team, based at NASA Goddard Space
Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., describes the observation as seeing the
glow of a distant city at night from an airplane. The light is too distant
and feeble to resolve individual objects.
Artist illustration of the early
Universe. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (SSC).
"We think we are seeing the collective light from millions of the first
objects to form in the universe," said Dr. Alexander Kashlinsky, Science
Systems and Applications scientist and lead author on the Nature article
that appeared in the Nov. 3 issue. "The objects disappeared eons ago, yet
their light is still traveling across the universe."
Scientists theorize that space, time and matter originated 13.7 billion
years ago in a Big Bang. Another 200 million years would pass before the
era of first starlight. A 10-hour observation by Spitzer's infrared array
camera in the constellation Draco captured a diffuse glow of infrared light,
lower in energy than optical light and invisible to us. The Goddard team
says that this glow is likely from Population III stars, a hypothesized
class of stars thought to have formed before all others. (Population I
and II stars, named by order of their discovery, comprise the familiar
types of stars we see at night.)
Theorists say the first stars were likely over a hundred times more massive
than Earth's sun and extremely hot, bright, and short-lived, each one burning
for only a few million years. The ultraviolet light that Population III
stars emitted would be redshifted, or stretched to lower energies, by the
universe's expansion. That light should now be detectable in the infrared.
"This deep observation was filled with familiar-looking stars and galaxies,"
said Dr. John Mather, senior project scientist for JWST and a co-author
on the Nature article. "We removed everything we knew---all the stars and
galaxies both near and far. We were left with a picture of part of the
sky with no stars or galaxies, but it still had this infrared glow with
giant blobs that we think could be the glow from the very first stars."
This new Spitzer discovery agrees with observations from the NASA Cosmic
Background Explorer (COBE) satellite from the 1990s that suggested there
may be an infrared background that could not be attributed to known stars.
It also supports observations from the NASA Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy
Probe from 2003, which estimated that stars first ignited 200 million to
400 million years after the Big Bang.
"This difficult measurement pushes the instrument to performance limits
that were not anticipated in its design," said team member Dr. S. Harvey
Moseley, instrument scientist for Spitzer. "We have worked very hard to
rule out other sources for the signal we observed."
The low noise and high resolution of Spitzer's infrared array camera enabled
the team to remove the fog of foreground galaxies, made of later stellar
populations, until the cumulative light from the first light dominated
the signal on large angular scales. The team, which also includes Dr. Richard
Arendt, Science Systems and Applications scientist, noted that future missions,
such as NASA's James Webb Space Telescope, will find the first individual
clumps of these stars or the individual exploding stars that might have
made the first black holes.
This analysis was partially funded through the National Science Foundation.
The Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., manages the Spitzer mission
for NASA. Science operations are conducted at the Spitzer Science Center
at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. NASA Goddard built
Spitzer's infrared array camera which took the observations. The instrument's
principal investigator is Dr. Giovanni Fazio, Smithsonian Astrophysical
Observatory, Cambridge, Mass.
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