UCLA ASTRONOMERS OBSERVE DISTANT GALAXIES MORE CLEARLY THAN EVER; STUDY SHEDS LIGHT ON WHAT GALAXIES WERE LIKE 5 BILLION YEARS AGO
Using the unprecedented
power of adaptive optics combined with the 10-meter (400 inch) Keck II
telescope, UCLA astronomers are peering into the distant universe to discover
what our own Milky Way galaxy might have been like at the time our sun
was forming.
The observations,
reported today at the annual meeting of the American Astronomical Society
by UCLA astronomers Tiffany Glassman and Dr. James Larkin, are an important
step forward in the process of understanding how galaxies formed and how
they evolved into the wide variety seen today.
"For the first
time, we're able to get very detailed images in a survey of distant galaxies
in the infrared," said Larkin, associate professor of astronomy at UCLA.
"These new measurements will help pin down the details of galaxy evolution,
and they show that adaptive optics will play an important role in understanding
galaxy formation billions of years ago."
The ten galaxies
observed are about 5 billion light years from earth (redshift of about
0.5), a period when the universe was about two-thirds of its present age.
This time span represents a significant portion of the lifetime of a galaxy
and is far enough back to begin to discriminate between different theories
of galaxy formation.
"This is an important
first step in gaining much more information about galaxies in the early
universe," said Glassman, graduate student in astronomy at UCLA. "Though
our current sample is small and the results preliminary, our only clue
towards an understanding of how galaxies - like our own Milky Way - form
is to look further and further into the past, and adaptive optics promises
to be one of the best ways to do that."
Galaxies are among
the largest cohesive structures in the universe, often consisting of more
than 100 billion stars. At great distances, however, even these vast structures
appear as only small smudges through the world's largest ground-based telescopes.
Adaptive optics
(AO) allows astronomers to remove much of the blurring effects of the earth's
atmosphere and achieve sharper images than any previously taken. These
sharper images allow the sizes of galaxies, as well as the properties of
smaller components that make up each galaxy, to be studied.
Glassman and Larkin
observed galaxies whose dominant components are a large, flattened disk
and a central, spherical bulge, similar to the Milky Way and other nearby
spiral galaxies. With AO the same basic properties (size and brightness
of the disks and bulges) can be measured for the distant galaxies they
observed and for local galaxies.
The astronomers
can now compare these properties to see how the galaxies have changed over
billions of years. They found that as a group the disks of the distant
galaxies are 2.5 times brighter at their center and 20% smaller than local
disks. A less quantitative analysis of the galaxy's bulges showed that
their central brightness also fades by about a factor of 2 but their size
stays relatively constant.
The results produced
by Glassman and Larkin support other observations and theories that indicate
that large galaxies were primarily assembled more than 10 billion years
ago and are slowly fading as a group as the rate of new star formation
declines.
To continue their
research, Glassman and Larkin are building a much larger sample of galaxies
including many at significantly greater distances. This survey is possible
because of a new camera for the Keck Telescope's Adaptive Optics system
called NIRC2 (Near Infrared Camera 2) which has been available to the researchers
since July through the cooperation of the camera team led by Keith Matthews
of Caltech.
NIRC2 has a much
larger field of view and is significantly more sensitive than the earlier
cameras and greatly improves the quality of the data available to Glassman
and Larkin. "This new sample should allow for more detailed comparisons
between local and distant galaxies, but perhaps more importantly it will
contain a small number of galaxies seen just after their initial formation,"
said Glassman. "Detailed images like these, of galaxies in their infancy,
will give astronomers the best handle on how galaxies first assembled."
This work was supported
by the National Science Foundation Center for Adaptive Optics.

A movie version of the figures is shown below, demonstrating the increase
in detail when going from a non-corrected image to a Keck AO image of the
same galaxy.
The poster presented at AAS meeting can be seen here.