UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Two previously invisible galaxies completely hidden by clouds of cosmic gas and dust have been discovered by an international team of researchers. While investigating new data of young, extremely distant galaxies observed with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile, astronomers noticed unexpected emissions coming from seemingly empty regions of space. The team, which includes a Penn State scientist, discovered that the radiation was emitted billions of years ago and came from two dust-enshrouded galaxies. This discovery suggests that numerous such galaxies might still be hidden in the early universe, many more than researchers were expecting.
“Studying the most distant galaxies at the cosmic dawn is one of the ultimate frontiers in astronomy,” said Yuexing Li, associate professor of astronomy and astrophysics at Penn State and co-author of the study, which is detailed in a paper appearing today (Sept. 22) in the journal Nature. “It is essential for our understanding of the formation of stars and interstellar medium in the early universe, which impacts the formation and evolution of galaxies at the present day such as our own Milky Way.”
When astronomers peer deep into the night sky, they observe what the universe looked like a long time ago. Because the speed of light is finite, images of the earliest galaxies provide us a glimpse of billions of years into the past. A key goal of scientists is to identify all the galaxies in the first billion years of cosmic history and to measure the rate at which the galaxies were growing by forming new stars.
Various efforts have been made over the past decades to observe distant galaxies, which are characterized by electromagnetic emissions that become strongly redshifted — shifted toward longer wavelengths — before reaching the Earth. So far, our knowledge of early galaxies has mostly relied on observations with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), which probes the ultra-violet (UV) emission from stars. However, recently, astronomers have started to use the unique capability of the ALMA telescope to study distant galaxies at submillimeter wavelengths, which can capture emissions from dust and gas. This could be particularly useful for studying dusty galaxies missed in the HST surveys due to the dust absorbing UV light.
In an ongoing large program, called REBELS (Reionization-Era Bright Emission Line Survey), astronomers are using ALMA to observe the emissions of 40 target galaxies at a time when the universe was only 5% of its current age. While analyzing the images for two of the galaxies, the astronomers noticed strong mysterious emissions at millimeter wavelengths far away from the intended targets. To their surprise, the extremely sensitive HST could not detect any UV photons from these locations.