Alert icon
We're changing our privacy policy. This stuff matters.  Learn more  Dismiss

New Look at the Infant Universe

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Upgrade to the latest Flash Player for improved playback performance. Upgrade now or more info.
33,030
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
There is no Interactive Transcript.

Uploaded by on Oct 29, 2010

From ESA's HubbleCast. In early 2009, a team of astronauts visited Hubble to repair the wear and tear of twenty years of operating in a hostile environment — and to install two new instruments, the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph, and Wide Field Camera 3 — better known as WFC3.

Hubble has become famous for its striking visible-light pictures of huge clouds of interstellar dust and gas. But sometimes scientists want to know what's happening behind, or inside, the cloud of dust. Making infrared observations pulls away the veil and reveals the hidden stars.

Until now, infrared imaging was challenging with Hubble. The Near Infrared Camera and Multi-object Spectrometer, or NICMOS, did allow astronomers to study objects in infrared light in ways not possible from the ground, but it forced them to make a difficult choice. Because its images were small — only about 65 000 pixels in total, similar to a mobile phone screen — NICMOS could produce the sharpest images only if it concentrated on a very narrow field of view. Taking in a wider view came at the cost of losing much of the detail.

These improvements mean Hubble is now far better at observing large areas of sky as well as very faint and very distant objects. These are key for the science of cosmology, the study of the origins and development of the Universe.

Because the Universe is expanding, light waves coming from distant objects are stretched as they travel through space, and the waves become longer. The further an object is away, the more its light is stretched on its journey to us, and the redder the light appears. Hence the effect is known as redshift.

For really distant objects, the ultraviolet and visible light is redshifted so much it goes infrared — literally, "below red" — and that is the reason that infrared imaging is so important for spotting these very distant galaxies.

This is the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, a visible light image taken in 2003 and 4 with Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys. The picture is of a little patch of sky almost a hundred times smaller than the area of the full moon. It contains no stars visible with the naked eye — but taking a million second exposure of this little black speck of space reveals these vanishingly faint faraway galaxies.

Studying the same region with WFC3's infrared photography reveals galaxies more distant still: some of these are so far away that they have been redshifted out of the visible spectrum altogether.

We see galaxies here as they were many billions of years ago. When the light from some of these galaxies started its long journey towards us, our Sun and Earth had not even begun to form.

But what is really exciting cosmologists about WFC3's infrared imaging of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field is not just what's in the foreground so to speak, amazing as that is, but the scatter of tiny, faint specks just visible in the background, beyond these already faraway galaxies.

Some of the flecks of light in this fuzzy image are just anomalies within the light detectors, but among them are faint impressions of early galaxies. In this photo we are looking at some of the most remote objects ever seen.
They are so distant, and their light has travelled so far to reach us, that we see these galaxies as they were 13 billion years ago, when the Universe was only about 5% of its current age.

Discovering and studying these galaxies can tell us a lot about the conditions that prevailed in the earliest years of the Universe, and confirm — or perhaps refute — our theories of early galaxy formation.

  • likes, 7 dislikes

Link to this comment:

Share to:

Top Comments

  • @InthegreatIam: Imagine the well above 750 billion dollars for the war in Iraq would have been spent on useful things like health care, better schools, better infrastructure, alternative energy research, city development, social services or projects and whatnot - like supermax jails for bankers ;) You could run the NSF for 100 years on that budget or the NIH for some 23 years.

    1 trillion dollars couldn't bring a working democracy to Iraq. That's not well-spent money and another promise not kept.

  • @DoctorWong1979

    i'm a devout catholic, and i love this stuff.

see all

All Comments (259)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • nachdem ich das hier gesehen habe, bin ich jetzt glücklich aber gleichzeitig deprimiert. weil es nicht so viel mehr gibt, zu erfinden. Schade

  • good work here

  • brilliant video

  • OMG at 5:01 to 5:10. It reminds me of Horton Hears a Who from Dr. Seuss. You can't see it with the naked eye but it there! :D

  • @ZzRvXzZ Why? it was a genuine question.

  • @LegendaryUsernameEva

    I will find where you live... and give you a slap in the face

  • Sooo I have a question. When looking at the universe is like looking back in time, looking back at some of the starts and galaxies that were forming 13 billion years ago whatnot. Would it ever be possible for us to look sooo far back into space that we can actually see and observe when the big bang actually happen? Cos that would be AWESOME!!!

  • @sbergman27 Looking at a distance star is like looking at the past, tell me what I don't know. Do you know what is the synonym for light?

  • @diowfj It took me a long time to understand this. By that, I mean that it's one thing to think of light taking 4.2 years to arrive from the nearest star, other than our Sol. It's another to consider light arriving from well over a couple of million years ago, from Andromeda. But when you make the jump to what we are able to see today... most of the way back to the beginning... it's a whole new ball game. "Numinous" is the only word that fits. Our understanding will be so incomplete when I die.

Loading...

Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more