Astronomers Spot Rare Arc From Hefty Galaxy Cluster
PASADENA, Calif. -- Seeing is believing, except when you don't believe
what you see. Astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have
found a puzzling arc of light behind an extremely massive cluster of
galaxies residing 10 billion light-years away. The galactic grouping,
discovered by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, was observed as it
existed when the universe was roughly a quarter of its current age of
13.7 billion years.
The giant arc is the stretched shape of a more distant
galaxy whose light is distorted by the monster cluster's powerful
gravity, an effect called gravitational lensing. The trouble is, the
arc shouldn't exist.
"When I first saw it, I kept staring at it, thinking it
would go away," said study leader Anthony Gonzalez of the University
of Florida in Gainesville, whose team includes researchers from NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "According to a statistical
analysis, arcs should be extremely rare at that distance. At that
early epoch, the expectation is that there are not enough galaxies
behind the cluster bright enough to be seen, even if they were
'lensed,' or distorted by the cluster. The other problem is that galaxy
clusters become less massive the further back in time you go. So it's
more difficult to find a cluster with enough mass to be a good lens for
gravitationally bending the light from a distant galaxy."
Galaxy clusters are collections of hundreds to
thousands of galaxies bound together by gravity. They are the most
massive structures in our universe. Astronomers frequently study galaxy
clusters to look for faraway, magnified galaxies behind them that
would otherwise be too dim to see with telescopes. Many such
gravitationally lensed galaxies have been found behind galaxy clusters
closer to Earth.
The surprise in this Hubble observation is spotting a
galaxy lensed by an extremely distant cluster. Dubbed IDCS
J1426.5+3508, the cluster is the most massive found at that epoch,
weighing as much as 500 trillion suns. It is 5 to 10 times larger than
other clusters found at such an early time in the history of the
universe. The team spotted the cluster in a search using NASA's Spitzer
Space Telescope in combination with archival optical images taken as
part of the National Optical Astronomy Observatory's Deep Wide Field
Survey at the Kitt Peak National Observatory, Tucson, Ariz. The
combined images allowed them to see the cluster as a grouping of very
red galaxies, indicating they are far away.
This unique system constitutes the most distant cluster
known to "host" a giant gravitationally lensed arc. Finding this
ancient gravitational arc may yield insight into how, during the first
moments after the Big Bang, conditions were set up for the growth of
hefty clusters in the early universe.
The arc was spotted in optical images of the cluster
taken in 2010 by Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys. The infrared
capabilities of Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3 helped provide a precise
distance, confirming it to be one of the farthest clusters yet
discovered.
Once the astronomers determined the cluster's distance,
they used Hubble, the Combined Array for Research in Millimeter-wave
Astronomy (CARMA) radio telescope, and NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory
to independently show that the galactic grouping is extremely massive.
"The chance of finding such a gigantic cluster so early
in the universe was less than one percent in the small area we
surveyed," said team member Mark Brodwin of the University of
Missouri-Kansas City. "It shares an evolutionary path with some of the
most massive clusters we see today, including the Coma cluster and the
recently discovered El Gordo cluster."
An analysis of the arc revealed that the lensed object
is a star-forming galaxy that existed 10 billion to 13 billion years
ago. The team hopes to use Hubble again to obtain a more accurate
distance to the lensed galaxy.
The team's results are described in three papers, which
will appear online today and will be published in the July 10, 2012
issue of The Astrophysical Journal. Gonzalez is the first author on one
of the papers; Brodwin, on another; and Adam Stanford of the
University of California at Davis, on the third. Daniel Stern and Peter
Eisenhardt of JPL are co-authors on all three papers.
JPL manages the Spitzer Space Telescope mission for
NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington. Science operations are
conducted at the Spitzer Science Center at the California Institute of
Technology in Pasadena. Data are archived at the Infrared Science
Archive housed at the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center at
Caltech. Caltech manages JPL for NASA. For more information about
Spitzer, visit
http://spitzer.caltech.edu and
http://www.nasa.gov/spitzer .