Mashable 前天 17:42
This Webb photo didnt just see galaxies. It changed their place in time.
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詹姆斯·韦伯太空望远镜(JWST)的最新研究,对哈勃望远镜曾观测过的深空区域进行了深入分析。利用其先进的中红外仪器(MIRI),韦伯望远镜能够探测到此前难以观测到的古老星系发出的微弱红外光。此次研究颠覆了部分已知古老星系的年龄和距离估计,将一些星系的起源时间推溯至宇宙大爆炸后仅数亿年,证实了韦伯望远镜在探索“宇宙黎明”时期的强大能力。研究成果表明,韦伯望远镜在揭示宇宙早期演化方面具有巨大潜力,能够更清晰地识别和表征早期星系。

🌌 韦伯望远镜通过中红外仪器(MIRI)对哈勃深空场进行了长时间观测,捕捉到宇宙早期(大爆炸后数亿年)的微弱红外信号,揭示了此前未被充分认识的古老星系。

⏱️ 研究发现,部分曾被认为年龄约为118亿年的星系,实际年龄可能接近133亿年,其起源被推溯至宇宙仅有4.5亿年时,这标志着它们属于宇宙形成初期的第一批星系。

🔭 韦伯望远镜的观测数据支持了其在中红外成像方面的卓越能力,能够穿透宇宙尘埃和气体,清晰识别出那些因尘埃或成熟恒星而呈现红色的星系,甚至超越了斯皮策望远镜的观测清晰度。

📈 MIDIS项目(MIRI Deep Imaging Survey)的成果表明,韦伯望远镜的MIRI仪器在表征从“宇宙正午”到“宇宙黎明”阶段的星系群体方面潜力巨大,能够帮助科学家更准确地理解宇宙的演化历程。

🔍 此次研究修正了近千个星系的距离估计,其中许多是早期宇宙的星系,这有助于构建更精确的宇宙时间线,并深入理解早期星系形成和演化的机制。

A James Webb Space Telescope study is setting the record straight on the ages of some known ancient galaxies, which have turned out to be much older and farther away in space than previously thought. 

Webb, a joint observatory of NASA and its European and Canadian counterparts, took a fresh look at a piece of the sky made famous by the Hubble Space Telescope's ultra-deep field view more than 20 years ago. At that time, Hubble's long-exposure image was extremely ambitious: Scientists pointed the telescope at a seemingly starless area, unsure what photons they'd collect. 

In the end, that ultra-deep field image was "found to be anything but blank," Webb researchers said, "containing thousands of distant galaxies." 

Now with Webb, this patch of sky is revealing more about the universe — even shuffling the cosmic timeline. Known as the MIRI Deep Imaging Survey, the project involved the Webb telescope's mid-infrared instrument, which detects light wavelengths invisible to the naked eye. The new findings from the survey are published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.

With Webb, astronomers are able to observe the faint infrared glow from ancient stars and the structures they formed. The telescope trained on the Hubble Ultra Deep Field area for 100 hours, according to the research, including 41 hours with one particular filter. The resulting image picked up dim signals from galaxies when the universe was barely a few hundred million years old — a mere whippersnapper.

To understand a deep field space image, think of it as you would a core sample taken from the ground, collecting older rocks and soil the farther down you go: The image is a tiny-but-distant slice of space, revealing cosmic history by cutting across billions of light-years, each deeper layer revealing an earlier time. 

"To our knowledge, this constitutes the longest single-filter exposure obtained with (Webb) of an extragalactic field as of yet," the authors wrote. 

The project, dubbed MIDIS for short, found nearly 2,500 light sources, most of them distant galaxies. About 1,000 now have revised distance estimates, based on how their light has shifted.

Webb was built to observe an early period known as "cosmic dawn," between 100 million to 1 billion years after the Big Bang, detecting light at invisible infrared wavelengths. In short, light gets stretched — or "redshifted" — over time and distance by the expansion of the universe. Those infrared waves can also pierce through the prevalent gas and dust in space that could otherwise obscure far and naturally weaker light sources. 

The James Webb Space Telescope used its mid-infrared instrument to look at the region captured in Hubble's famous Ultra Deep Field Image. Credit: NASA GSFC / CIL / Adriana Manrique Gutierrez illustration

In one case, the project found that a galaxy previously believed to be 11.8 billion years old was closer to 13.3 billion — pushing its origins back to when the universe was perhaps just 450 million years old. That puts the galaxy squarely in the first wave of galaxies formed.

Other objects in the MIDIS image reveal a different story: hundreds of red galaxies, some of which got their color because they’re dusty or contain mature, cooler stars. Either way, the results show Webb's MIRI instrument can be a powerful tool for uncovering missed or misidentified ancient galaxies. Not even NASA's Spitzer, a now-retired infrared space telescope, saw with this level of clarity. 

That bodes well for researchers looking into how the universe evolved from birthing the first galaxies to a time when star and supermassive black hole formation seemed to peak

"MIDIS surpasses preflight expectations," the authors wrote. "Deep MIRI imaging has great potential to characterise the galaxy population from cosmic noon to dawn."

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詹姆斯·韦伯太空望远镜 宇宙黎明 古老星系 红外天文 宇宙学
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