Astronomers snap image of Universe's fiery youth
NASA-GSFC NEWS RELEASE
Posted: January 8, 2002

Like a hyperactive child, the Universe had an energetic youth, according to a new result using data from the Two-Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS).

Light emitted by the young Universe, including that from the very first stars and galaxies to those formed when it was roughly 30 - 40 percent of its current age, has been detected with the 2MASS survey. The intensity of this light, called the Cosmic Infrared Background (CIB) radiation, is two to three times what is expected based on observed galaxies.

2MASS
This is an image of light from the young Universe as seen using data from the Two-Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS). The false colors represent different wavelengths of infrared light, which is invisible to the human eye. Photo: National Science Foundation and NASA
 
The strength of the CIB confirms prior observations indicating that an incredible burst of star formation occurred during the Universe's youth. It also supports the idea that a mysterious type of invisible matter pulled gas together shortly after the Universe's birth, permitting the first stars and galaxies to form.

"We are thrilled to get a glimpse of the youthful Universe, which comes to us from regions so remote that their details are beyond the reach of the mightiest telescopes available today," said Dr. Alexander Kashlinsky of Science Systems and Applications, Inc. at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., who is the lead author of a paper on this research to be submitted to the Astrophysical Journal. The results are being announced Monday by Kashlinsky and his team at the 199th meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Washington, D.C.

The astronomers used a special set of infrared measurements obtained with the National Science Foundation's 2MASS survey. This survey was conducted between 1997-2000 by Dr. Michael Skrutskie at the University of Virginia, who is the Principal Investigator for 2MASS, and Dr. Roc Cutri, the 2MASS Project Scientist at the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center in Pasadena, California. 2MASS astronomers have cataloged over 300 million stars and galaxies at wavelengths of light invisible to conventional optical telescopes.

Each 2MASS image is a short exposure, typically just eight seconds long, but some areas of the sky were electronically photographed as many as 1,000 times. Multiple images of those regions were combined with a computer, yielding a high-resolution, long-exposure picture that captured extremely faint objects. The team used these high-quality pictures, called standard star fields, to detect the weak CIB, which is 500 times fainter than the night sky.

By carefully combining these images for a small patch of sky in the constellation Hercules, Dr. Kashlinsky and his team were able to probe the Universe with 100 times the sensitivity of the rest of the sky seen by 2MASS. This was just enough to begin to detect light from galaxies so far away that only their combined glow faintly appeared in the infrared images.

"What is exciting about this is that 2MASS never planned to use these particular star fields to do cosmological studies," says Dr. Sten Odenwald, Chief Scientist with Raytheon ITS, also at NASA Goddard. "There are dozens of these fields scattered across the sky, which we can now use to explore the ancient Universe. It's like exploring Earth's crust by looking down a few deep wells."

The new evidence provides yet another indication that we live in an evolving Universe as predicted by the prevailing Big Bang theory. "The most important thing we have confirmed is that, long before Earth formed, the Universe was a lot less clumpy, but at the same time it was much more active in forming the first stars," says Kashlinsky.

According to the team, although the CIB is faint today, the quantity of the CIB radiation is still between two and three times more than what would be expected if astronomers just extrapolated based on the amount emitted by observable galaxies. The early Universe probably experienced a burst of star formation much greater than what occurs today. As legions of stars turned on, space was flooded with light that is now seen as an excessively strong CIB.

It wasn't easy to uncover this tell-tale light from the remote Universe. First, the astronomers had to remove the clutter of hundreds of foreground stars in our Milky Way galaxy, which covered the tiny patch of sky they were using. Most of the stars were nearly a million times fainter than those we can see with the naked eye. They also had to allow for changes in the atmosphere, telescope, and even dust in our solar system, which could hide the distant cosmic light. What was left over was a nearly featureless glow that covered their patch of sky.

Like reading a fingerprint, they decoded the clumpy pattern hidden in the light, and discovered traces of the Universe as it was more than 8 billion years ago. It was a time in cosmic history when galaxies were already beginning to form clusters, but the process had not matured to the degree that it has in the modern Universe around us today.

The measurement showed that the starburst occurred when the Universe was between 5 and 40 percent of its current age (corresponding to a redshift between 7 and 1). Such a vigorous display so early supports the idea that a strange type of invisible matter, called cold dark matter, exists.

Current theories about the evolution of the Universe say that the Universe began in an incredibly tiny, hot, and dense state which quickly expanded and cooled, generating all the matter and energy that exists. The expansion, called the Big Bang, continues today. The Big Bang presents a problem for rapid star and galaxy formation, because stars form when clouds of gas and dust collapse under the influence of their own self-gravity, and galaxies are born when the mutual gravity of stars causes the stars to cluster together.

Energy, in the form of electromagnetic radiation (light) from the first instant of the Big Bang kept normal matter too hot to congregate via gravity. Furthermore, the expansion of the cosmos increased the space between gas clouds and stars, which should have inhibited their tendency to come together as stars and galaxies.

Cold dark matter, on the other hand, does not respond to electromagnetic radiation, which is why it is invisible to us. However, like normal matter, it self-gravitates, and its gravity pulls on normal matter. Since it did not feel the radiation from the Big Bang, cold dark matter could have started self-gravitating much earlier than normal matter. This way, cold dark matter planted gravitational "seeds" which later attracted normal matter once the Universe cooled sufficiently to allow normal matter to respond to gravity (about 300,000 years after the Big Bang). Like a snowball that grows as it rolls down a hill, the seeds continued to attract ever greater quantities of normal matter, despite the expansion of the cosmos, and the first stars and galaxies formed relatively soon after the Universe's birth.

"A Universe populated by cold dark matter would be expected to form lots of stars and galaxies soon after its birth, which is what our result indicates," said Kashlinsky. The nature of cold dark matter is unknown, but it may be in the form of exotic sub-atomic particles, or even miniature black holes.

More exciting discoveries may also lie in store for the team of astronomers as they continue to explore the 2MASS data. Buried within the light detected by 2MASS may also be glimpses of still more ancient light from the first generations of stars, or even the light from powerful bursts of star formation concealed by dust within infant galaxies. NASA's Next Generation Space Telescope, the development of which is being led by Dr. John Mather at NASA-Goddard, who is also one of the team members, may be the instrument which will let astronomers explore this next era in cosmic evolution.

The 2MASS project is a collaboration between the University of Massachusetts and the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center (IPAC) at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. Funding is provided primarily by NASA and the National Science Foundation. The University of Massachusetts constructed and is maintaining the observatory facilities, and operates the survey. All data processing and data product generation is being carried out by IPAC. Survey operations began in Spring 1997 and will last for about 4 years. This work was supported by NASA through the Office of Space Science via a 1995 Long-Term Space Astrophysics Grant.