This time is because the galaxy cluster Abell 1835 is between this distant object and us. This object is also visible to us because of gravitational lensing. They include a galaxy called Abell 1835 IR1916, which was discovered in 2004, by astronomers from the European Southern Observatory using a near-infrared instrument on the Very Large Telescope. The objects in the Hubble UDF may well be the farthest known objects, but there have been other contenders. Light from this young galaxy, MACS1149-JD, was emitted when our 13.7-billion-year-old universe was just 500 million years old.Ĭredit: NASA, ESA, W. Coe (STScI), and the CLASH TeamĮarlier in 2012, with the combined power of NASA’s Spitzer and Hubble Space Telescopes, as well as the use of gravitational lensing, a team of astronomers spotted what might then have been the most distant galaxy ever seen. The tremendously strong gravity of the cluster actually magnifies the light from the distant galaxy.Ĭredit: NASA, ESA, M. This effect occurs when a distant galaxy is fortuitously aligned with a massive galaxy cluster (in this case, MACS J0647+7015). To spot this galaxy, astronomers used gravitational lensing. It’s only a tiny fraction of the size of our Milky Way – and was observed at 420 million years after the Big Bang, when the universe was 3 percent of its present age of 13.7 billion years. Just under a month ago, the current candidate was this object: a young galaxy called MACS0647-JD. This means the light from this galaxy (pictured below) left 13.3+ billion light years ago. The redshift of the light observed from this galaxy (with a value of 11.9) tells us that the light was emitted about 380 million years after the Big Bang. ![]() So, what is the farthest known object from Earth? There have been many candidates for this title in the last decade, but they are continually surpassed by new discoveries.Īs of this writing it seems that one of the galaxies in the recent Hubble discovery I mentioned may be a distance record breaker. Galaxies that existed in that time period would be very young and very different in structure and appearance than the grand spirals we see nearby today. The UDF looks back approximately 13 billion years (approximately between 400 and 800 million years after the Big Bang). The smallest, reddest galaxies in the image, of which there are about 100, are among the most distant known objects! There are approximately 10,000 galaxies in this view, which is a sort of “core sample” of a very narrow patch of sky near the constellation Fornax. The Ultra Deep Field (UDF) is one of the deepest views of the visible universe to date certainly it was the deepest when it was originally created in in 2003-2004. The questions are, how far back can we see at visible and infrared wavelengths? And what can we see? That’s a long time ago to be sure, but it was also before the first objects in the universe formed. The microwave afterglow of the Big Bang that was seen by the COBE and WMAP satellites is from about 378,000 years after the Big Bang. With every year that passes, our newest technology enables us to see further and further back. ( Phil Plait has a good column about this discovery too.)Ĭredit: NASA, ESA, R. Their discovery, which you can read more about in the NASA feature is exciting because it might give us an idea of how abundant galaxies were close to the era when astronomers think galaxies first started forming. (Current observations suggest that the Universe is about 13.798 billion years old.) The extreme distance of these newly discovered galaxies means their light has been traveling to us for more than 13 billion years, from a time when the Universe was less than 4% of its current age. Without infrared light we might not see those features, and thus couldn’t determine the distance to these far away objects. Spectral features from galaxies that we normally see in UV or visible are likewise shifted into infrared, particularly for the most distant things. (The opposite of the our namesake effect, blueshift!) Redshift means that light that is emitted as ultraviolet or visible light is shifted more and more to redder wavelengths. ![]() Why infrared? Because the Universe is expanding therefore the farther back we look, the faster objects are moving away from us, which shifts their light towards the red. ![]() This survey, called UDF12, used Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 to peer deeper into space in near-infrared light than any previous Hubble observation. The results are from survey of the same patch of sky known as the Ultra Deep Field (UDF). There was recently excitement over a Hubble Space Telescope discovery of seven primitive galaxies located over 13 billion light years away from us. I was inspired to pick up where Alexe left off with her “est” blogs, and write about “Farthest,” because of some recent, cool, astronomical news.
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