Los Angeles, Dec 25 : A galaxy once considered the oldest has reclaimed its title,
scientists reported.
Poring through Hubble Space Telescope photos, the
team recalculated the galaxy's age and determined it is actually 13.3 billion
years old — not a mere 13.2 billion.
The dim galaxy filled with blue
stars was first noticed last year by a different group of researchers, who also
used the workhorse telescope to make the previous age estimate. It reigned as
the most ancient galaxy observed until last month when it was knocked off its
perch by another distant galaxy.
Now it's back on top after the team used
a longer exposure time to get a clearer view of the earliest and far-off
galaxies. Seeing the most distant galaxies is like looking back in time and this
one existed when the universe was in its infancy — about 380 million years old.
More observations are needed to confirm the result, but astronomers think it's
the best candidate to date.
Besides refining the galaxy's age, they found
six more early ones.
"People have found one object here and there," but
never so many early galaxies, said Richard Ellis, an astronomer at the
California Institute of Technology who led the new work.
The findings
will be published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.
Scientists are
excited about the bounty of early galaxies, which should help refine theories
about the formation of the first stars and galaxies. Astronomers think galaxies
started appearing about 200 million years after the Big Bang, the explosion
believed to have created the universe 13.7 billion years ago. Our Milky Way —
one of hundreds of billions of galaxies — formed about 10 billion years
ago.
The new study adds further evidence that galaxies formed gradually
over several hundred million years and not in a single burst.
"We want to
know our cosmic roots, how things got started and the origins of the galaxies
that we see nowadays," said Harvard University astrophysicist Avi Loeb, who had
no role in the latest research.
Launched in 1990, Hubble has consistently
peered back in time to reveal ancient and distant objects. The farther away
something is, the longer it takes for its light to travel to Earth, which
scientists use to estimate its age.
As far back as Hubble can see, it
still can't capture the earliest galaxies. That job is left to its more powerful
successor, the James Webb Telescope, to be launched in
2018.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Distant galaxy regains title as oldest in universe
Distant galaxy regains title as oldest in universe
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