Astronomers have found a superheated “star manufacturing unit” that existed simply 800 million years after the Huge Bang. The star manufacturing unit, a galaxy often called Y1, is birthing stars at a fee 180 instances quicker than the Milky Manner does. The invention of such a beforehand unknown excessive area of starbirth may assist scientists clarify how galaxies grew so shortly within the early universe.
The staff found the character of Y1 by first measuring the temperature of its superheated cosmic mud. Utilizing the Atacama Giant Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), the researchers had been capable of analyze the sunshine emitted by the primordial galaxy, which has been travelling to Earth for 13 billion years.
The analysis is a part of a unbroken effort by astronomers to grasp the situations below which the primary era of stars, often called “Inhabitants III (POP III)” stars, fashioned. These situations are considered very completely different from the situations below which trendy, or POP I, stars just like the solar had been born.
Touring star factories
Stars are cast in huge complexes of dense fuel and mud such because the Orion Nebula and the Carina Nebula in the local universe. These nebulas are bright because their star-forming gas and dust is illuminated by light from young massive stars within them. This illumination covers both light visible to the human eye and longer wavelengths of light in the infrared and radio regions of the electromagnetic spectrum.
“At wavelengths like this, the galaxy is lit up by billowing clouds of glowing dust grains,” Bakx said. “When we saw how bright this galaxy shines compared to other wavelengths, we immediately knew we were looking at something truly special.”
This revelation was possible thanks to the sensitivity of ALMA, composed of 66 radio antennas located in the Atacama desert region of Northern Chile, and its Band 9 instrument which is tuned to a specific wavelength of light. ALMA allowed Bakx and colleagues to determine that the dust of Y1 was glowing with a temperature of around minus 356 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 180 degrees Celsius).
“The temperature is certainly chilly compared to household dust on Earth, but it’s much warmer than any other comparable galaxy we’ve seen,” team member Yoichi Tamura of Nagoya University in Japan said. “This confirmed that it really is an extreme star factory. Even though it’s the first time we’ve seen a galaxy like this, we think that there could be many more out there. Star factories like Y1 could have been common in the early universe.”
While Y1 is producing stars and growing at an incredible rate of around 180 solar masses every year as the team observed it 13 billion years ago, this starburst period wouldn’t have lasted too long, at least not in cosmological terms. Scientists do theorize, however, that these periods of intense star formation or starburst may have been common in early galaxies, but are currently hidden from our view.
“We don’t know how common such phases might be in the early universe, so in the future we want to look for more examples of star factories like this,” Bakx said. “We also plan to use the high-resolution capabilities of ALMA to take a closer look at how this galaxy works.”
Further investigation of Y1 may help answer a lingering puzzle about galaxies in the early universe. Previous studies have shown that primordial galaxies are filled with more dust than their older population of stars can create. The relatively high temperature of Y1 could pose an answer to this puzzle, suggesting that the high volume of dust is actually an illusion.
“Galaxies in the early universe seem to be too young for the amount of dust they contain. That’s strange, because they don’t have enough old stars, around which most dust grains are created,” team member Laura Sommovigo, of the Flatiron Institute and Columbia University said. “But a small amount of warm dust can be just as bright as large amounts of cool dust, and that’s exactly what we’re seeing in Y1.
“Even though these galaxies are still young and don’t yet contain much heavy elements or dust, what they do have is both hot and bright.”
The team’s research was published on Wednesday (Nov.12) in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.