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Early Universe bristled with starburst galaxies
by Staff Writers
Amsterdam, The Netherlands (SPX) Apr 05, 2022

The green and red splotch in this image is the most active star-making galaxy in the very distant universe. Nicknamed "Baby Boom," the galaxy is churning out an average of up to 4,000 stars per year, more than 10 times the number produced in our own Milky Way galaxy. It was spotted 12.3 billion light-years away by a suite of telescopes, including NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope.

Baby Boom is a type of galaxy called a starburst. Like some other starbursts, it is thought to be a collection of colliding galaxies. As the galaxies smash together, gas becomes compressed, triggering the birth of stars. In this multi-wavelength portrait, the color red shows where loads of new stars are forming in Baby Boom, and where warm dust heated by the stars is giving off infrared light.

Green (visible-light wavelengths) denotes gas in the Baby Boom galaxy, while blue (also visible light) shows galaxies in the foreground that are not producing nearly as many stars. Yellow/orange (near-infrared light) indicates starlight from the outer portion of Baby Boom. The red blob to the left is another foreground galaxy that is not producing a lot of stars.

In the first few billion years after the Big Bang, the universe contained far more so-called starburst galaxies than models predict. As many as 60 to 90 percent of the stars in the early universe appear to have been produced by galaxies undergoing a growth spurt. This is what an analysis of more than 20,000 distant galaxies show. The team, led by astronomers from University of Groningen (the Netherlands) will soon publish its findings in The Astrophysical Journal.

Starburst galaxies are galaxies in a growth spurt. They produce many more stars than normal in a relatively short period of time. A stellar growth spurt lasts 10 to 100 million years. Galaxies often live for billions of years and can undergo several growth spurts. To trigger a growth spurt, a sudden inflow of gas is needed, otherwise the building blocks for new stars will soon run out. Such an inflow can occur, for example, when two galaxies approach each other.

A research team led by Pierluigi Rinaldi, PhD student at the University of Groningen (the Netherlands), studied the data of more than 20,000 distant galaxies. This data was collected in recent years with the Hubble Space Telescope, with the MUSE instrument on the European Very Large Telescope in Chile and with the Spitzer Space Telescope. The telescopes looked so far back in time that the researchers were able to study galaxies that formed 11 to 13 billion years ago. The Big Bang was 13.7 billion years ago.

The analysis shows that in the first few billion years after the Big Bang, about 20 to 40 percent of all star-forming galaxies were starburst galaxies. These galaxies in a growth spurt accounted for 60 to 90 percent of the new increase in stars. By comparison, today the Universe is much quieter and only about 10 percent of new stars are born in starburst galaxies.

Furthermore, the analysis shows that growth spurts occur more often in smaller galaxies than in larger ones. It even appears that many small starburst galaxies have been captured by the telescopes just when they are forming. "In this sense, you can compare it to the growth spurt in humans. That is also strongest during infancy," says Rinaldi.

The results came as a surprise because until recently, starburst galaxies were considered unusual and of minor importance in the formation and growth of galaxies. "Even the latest and most sophisticated models of galaxy formation had not predicted this," said Rinaldi. " It seems likely that the physical processes occur at too small a scale for the models to account for them."

Karina Caputi (University of Groningen), Rinaldi's supervisor adds: "Of course, it gives us something to think about with regard to those models. And that's a good sign." In the coming period, Caputi wants to further investigate the origin and evolution of the first galaxies. She can do this because she was recently awarded a NWO Vici grant and because the James Webb Space Telescope will also be focusing its mirrors on distant galaxies.

Research Report: "The galaxy starburst/main-sequence bimodality over five decades in stellar mass at z ~ 3-6.5"


Related Links
Netherlands Research School for Astronomy
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It


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LAMOST Helps to Propose New Method Searching for Clusters in Andromeda Galaxy
Beijing, China (SPX) Mar 23, 2022
Making use of the LAMOST spectra data as the training sample, a research team led by Dr. WANG Shoucheng and Prof. MA Jun from National Astronomical Observatories of Chinese Academy of Sciences (NAOC) proposed a new method to search for star clusters in the Andromeda galaxy. With this method, the researchers identified 117 new high-confidence cluster candidates in the Andromeda galaxy based on the Pan-Andromeda Archaeological Survey (PAndAS) data, among which 109 are young cluster candidates locate ... read more

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