The Big Bang - A New Perspective?
Hey everyone! It’s Peter is a geek time! Did you know that astronomers recently published the largest map of the universe, stretching back more than
13 billion years? For those of you on the West Coast, that’s billion with a big fat ‘B’! This new map revealed a big fat surprise, as well: It seems that many galaxies were already highly
evolved at the earliest phases of the universe—many more than predicted by the
Big Bang theory of the beginnings of our universe. No way, Boss! Yes way, Sancho! Dope...
“The new
results will be used to modify the Big Bang theory so it better matches what’s
observed,” says astrophysicist Jeyhan Kartaltepe of the Rochester Institute of
Technology. “What we have to tweak is our understanding of how stars formed in
the very early universe, what the physical properties were of that initial gas
they formed out of, and how rapidly they formed.”
Kartaltepe
and University of California, Santa Barbara physicist Caitlin Casey have been
working together for two years to turn raw data from the James Webb Space
Telescope (JWST) into an image of the universe across deep time that anyone, including dopes like me, can
explore. The final result of this project, called the COSMOS-Web field project,
is now online: a composite of 800,000 glittering galaxies. Think about that for a second; 800,000 galaxies! And that’s just for starters! The map also contains vast “galactic walls,” sheet-like structures of concentrated galaxies,
and voids of empty space. I love astronomy!
Thanks to
the James Webb’s more powerful mirror and advanced observing techniques, this
new image is over 150 times larger than an earlier version created by the Hubble Telescope in
2004, and shows close to 80 times more galaxies—many of them much like our own
Milky Way.
Astronomers
have long thought that the oldest galaxies in the universe formed a few hundred
million years after the Big Bang, which happened 13.8 billion years ago, uh…give or take a year. So
Kartaltepe and Casey were surprised to find that so many of these galaxies were
already highly-evolved by 13.5 billion years ago—with well-defined structures
and older stars—and that some had light spectrums that showed supermassive
black holes at their cores. How cool is that?! You are such a dork.
This
suggests the galaxies formed much earlier than expected, which is why the Big Bang
theory will have to be adjusted, Kartaltepe says. She also hopes the individual
James Webb observations in the mosaic image will be used as an online resource
by astronomers studying the evolution of galaxies: The sample set of 800,000
galaxies is so large that it includes numerous examples of almost every type of
galaxy, at almost every stage of evolution.
“Deep
Field” images like the COSMOS-Web image not only tell the story of the
universe, they can also help us locate our own galaxy in space and time. The
vast scales mapped in the image, roughly 13.5 billion light-years, which
reaches to the farthest and oldest galaxies in the universe, is unprecedented.
The map contains evidence of those vast “galactic walls” that I mentioned above, sheet-like structures of
concentrated galaxies, and voids of empty space.
One such
wall is the Sloan Great Wall, about 1 billion light years away and is the largest
known structure in the universe. But every branch and node of the cosmic web
seems to be slowly collapsing under the effects of gravity, while the voids
grow ever larger.
“The voids
push galaxies out,” explains astrophysicist Noam Libeskind of Germany’s Leibniz
Institute for Astrophysics in Potsdam. “They are like balloons being inflated.” Again, very cool.
My fascination with the stars began when I was quite young, and I trust it never ebbs. A good deal of our philosophy, religion, and art (whether it be visual or literary) came from the ancients after they gazed at the universe around them; many times without knowing how vast the universe was. They asked questions that had to do with where we come from, why are we here, and what else is there? And in doing so, left us that legacy of art and literature that demands to be seen and read.
The
universe is in flux, as is our understanding of it. And as our ability to gaze grows exponentially, and our understanding of it grows, however incrementally, we find ourselves, I believe, in the words of the great RUSH song...Closer To The Heart.
Write to Peter: magtour@icloud.com
Comments
Post a Comment