Record-breaking radio wave picked up from 9 billion light years away
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The Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope, located in Pune, India,
received the record-breaking signal. (Image credit: National Centre for Radio
Astrophysics) |
Astronomers detected a radio signal from deeper in space
than ever before, using a cosmic trick first predicted by Einstein.
By using warped space-time as a magnifying glass,
astronomers have picked up the most distant signal of its kind from a remote
galaxy, and it could blow open a window into how our universe formed.
The record-breaking radio frequency signal, picked up by the
Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT) in India, came from the galaxy
SDSSJ0826+5630, located 8.8 billion light-years from Earth, meaning the signal
was emitted when the universe was roughly a third of its current age.
The signal is an emission line from the universe's most primordial
element: neutral hydrogen. In the aftermath of the Big Bang, this element
existed throughout the cosmos as a turbulent fog from which the first stars and
galaxies eventually formed. Astronomers have long searched for distant signals
from neutral hydrogen in the hope of finding the moment the first stars began
to shine, but those signals have proved difficult to spot, given the
extraordinary distances involved.
Now, a new study, published Dec. 23 in the journal Monthly
Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, shows that an
effect called gravitational lensing could help astronomers spot evidence of
neutral hydrogen.
"A galaxy emits different kinds of radio signals,"
study lead author Arnab Chakraborty(opens in new tab), a cosmologist at McGill
University in Canada, said in a statement. "Until now,
it's only been possible to capture this particular signal from a galaxy nearby,
limiting our knowledge to those galaxies closer to Earth."
The 'dark age' of the universe
Forged roughly 400,000 years after the beginning of the
universe, when protons and electrons first bonded to neutrons, neutral hydrogen
populated the dim early cosmos throughout its so-called dark age, before the
first stars and galaxies came into existence.
When stars are forming, they blast out fierce ultraviolet
light that strips the electrons from much of the hydrogen atoms in the space
surrounding them, thus ionizing the atoms so they're no longer neutral.
Eventually, young stars lose their ultraviolet intensity, and some of the
ionized atoms recombine into neutral hydrogen. Detecting and studying neutral
hydrogen can provide an insight into the lives of the earliest stars, as well
as the epoch before stars existed.
Neutral hydrogen emits light at a characteristic wavelength
of 21 centimeters. But using neutral-hydrogen signals to study the early
universe is a tough task, as the long-wavelength, low-intensity signals often
get drowned out across vast cosmic distances. Until now, the farthest 21 cm hydrogen
signal detected was 4.4 billion light-years away.
Gravitational lensing peers into the past
To find a signal at double the previous distance, the
researchers turned to an effect called gravitational lensing.
In his theory of general relativity, Albert Einstein
explained that gravity isn't produced by an unseen force but rather is our
experience of space-time curving and distorting in the presence of matter and
energy. Gravitational lensing occurs when a massive object sits between our
telescopes and its source. In this case, the space-warping object was the
gigantic star-forming galaxy SDSSJ0826+5630, which used its powerful warping
effect to act as a lens that steered a faint and distant neutral hydrogen
signal into focus for the GMRT.
"In this specific case, the signal is bent by the
presence of another massive body, another galaxy, between the target and the
observer," study co-author Nirupam Roy, an associate professor of physics
at the Indian Institute of Science, said in the statement. "This
effectively results in the magnification of the signal by a factor of 30, allowing
the telescope to pick it up."
Now that the researchers have found a way of probing
previously unreachable hydrogen clouds, they want to use it to improve the
charting of the universe throughout its various cosmological ages and,
hopefully, pinpoint the moment the first stars began to shine.
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