Uma evolução cósmica através de 5.000 galáxias

O Telescópio Espacial James Webb da NASA lançou uma visualização 3D de cerca de 5.000 galáxias, incluindo uma das primeiras galáxias, a Galáxia de Maisie, formada 390 milhões de anos após o Big Bang. Esta observação notável demonstra as capacidades avançadas de imagem da Web, permitindo aos pesquisadores explorar partes do universo nunca antes vistas e fazer novas perguntas sobre a formação de estrelas nessas galáxias iniciais.

Os dados do Webb mostram a capacidade de visualizar e identificar milhares de galáxias simultaneamente.

O Office of Public Outreach do Space Telescope Science Institute lançou uma nova visualização científica dos dados da pesquisa CEERS (Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science). O vídeo mostra Webb explorando uma região chamada Extended Growth Strip, revelando muitas galáxias nunca antes vistas. Ele mostra a riqueza de galáxias em todo o universo e culmina na Galáxia de Maisie, que reside a 13,4 bilhões de anos-luz da Terra.


Esta visualização 3D retrata cerca de 5.000 galáxias dentro de uma pequena área da pesquisa CEERS (Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science), que coletou dados de uma região chamada Extended Growth Strip. À medida que a câmera se afasta de nossa visão, a cada segundo o conjunto de dados viaja 200 milhões de anos-luz e olha para trás 200 milhões de anos. A aparência das galáxias muda, refletindo o fato de que objetos mais distantes são encontrados em épocas anteriores do Universo, quando as galáxias são menos desenvolvidas. O vídeo termina com a Galáxia de Maisie, que se formou 390 milhões de anos após o Big Bang, ou cerca de 13,4 bilhões de anos atrás.

Nova visualização 3D destaca 5.000 galáxias reveladas pelo Telescópio Espacial Webb

Este vídeo é uma visualização científica capturada como parte da galáxia CEERS (Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science) pesquisa mostra um grande esforço[{” attribute=””>NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. It flies by thousands of galaxies, starting with those nearby and ending with less-developed galaxies in the very distant universe, including one never seen before Webb. 

The area highlighted in this visualization is a small part of the Extended Groth Strip, a region between the Ursa Major and Boötes constellations originally observed by the Hubble Space Telescope between 2004 and 2005. While this vast region contains about 100,000 galaxies, the visualization focuses on approximately 5,000 – with the nearest and more complex galaxies, shown in the beginning, located within a few billion light-years of Earth. As the visualization proceeds, showing galaxies farther away from Earth, we see different stages of the universe’s history and evolution.

Extended Groth Strip

Extended Groth Strip. Credit: NASA, ESA, M. Davis (University of California, Berkeley), and A. Koekemoer (STScI)

The visualization’s farthest galaxy, known as Maisie’s Galaxy, is a target of great interest to astronomers. It formed about 390 million years after the big bang, or about 13.4 billion years ago. It’s not only one of the first bright, extremely distant galaxies found by Webb, but it’s also an example of an early galaxy that only Webb could see. This is because Webb’s instruments can capture the light from these early galaxies, which has been shifted to infrared wavelengths by the expansion of the universe. 

“This observatory just opens up this entire period of time for us to study,” said Rebecca Larson of the Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, New York, one of the survey’s investigators. “We couldn’t study galaxies like Maisie’s before because we couldn’t see them. Now, not only are we able to find them in our images, we’re able to find out what they’re made of and if they differ from the galaxies that we see close by.”

Steven Finkelstein of the University of Texas at Austin, principal investigator of the CEERS program, continued, “This observation exceeded our expectations. The sheer number of galaxies that we’re finding in the early universe is at the upper end of all predictions.” The observatory’s ability to conduct surveys like these provides a demonstration of Webb’s instruments for astronomers to reference for future observations.

This visualization not only shows just how far Webb can observe, but also how much it builds off the accomplishments of Hubble. In many cases, Hubble’s observations, along with Webb’s data from the CEERS Survey, enabled researchers to determine which galaxies were truly far away – the early-universe galaxies of interest – and which were nearby, but so dusty that their visible light was obscured. 

With these observations, the next goal for researchers is to learn about the formation of stars in these early galaxies.

“We’re used to thinking of galaxies as smoothly growing,” Finkelstein remarked. “But maybe these stars are forming like firecrackers. Are these galaxies forming more stars than expected? Are the stars they’re making more massive than we expect? These data have given us the information to ask these questions. Now, we need more data to get those answers.” 

The James Webb Space Telescope is the world’s premier space science observatory. Webb is solving mysteries in our solar system, looking beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probing the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb is an international program led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space Agency) and the Canadian Space Agency. 

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