In a recent study that was submitted to MNRAS, a team of scientists used the JWST’s first batch of data to locate a candidate galaxy called CEERS-93316 that formed about 250 million years after the Big Bang and broke the redshift record with a value of z = 16.7. Even though JWST has only recently begun sending back its first batch of data, this discovery is very exciting because it demonstrates how capable it is. To capture pictures with JWST, the Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science Survey, or CEERS, was developed.
“The past few weeks have been surreal, watching all the records that stood for a long time with Hubble be broken by JWST,” says Dr. Rebecca Bowler, who is an Ernest Rutherford Fellow at the University of Manchester, and a co-author on the study. “Finding a z = 16.7 galaxy candidate is an amazing feeling – it wasn’t something we were expecting from the early data.”
This new study talks about a dozen previous studies that measured objects up to redshifts z 10 using a mix of ground-based observations and the Hubble Space Telescope and Spitzer Space Telescope.
“It’s amazing to have found such a distant galaxy candidate already with Webb given that this is just the first set of data,” says Mr. Callum Donnan, a PhD student at the University of Edinburgh, and lead author of the study. “It is important to note that to be certain of the redshift, the galaxy will need follow up observations using spectroscopy. This is why we refer to it as a galaxy candidate.”
The Near Infrared Camera (NIRCam), the primary camera on JWST, provided the evidence that proved CEERS-93316 cannot be a low-mass star or an unobstructed active galactic nucleus. Cosmologists are interested in what is happening in galaxies that young, so shortly after the Big Bang, since CEERS-93316 may only be 250 million years old.
“After the Big Bang the Universe entered a period known as the dark ages, a time before any stars had been born,” explains Dr. Bowler. “The observations of this galaxy push observations back to the time when we think the first galaxies ever to exist were being formed. Already we’ve found more galaxies in the very early Universe than computer simulations predicted, so there is clearly a lot of open questions about how and when the first stars and galaxies formed.”
Given that this amazing discovery came from JWST’s first set of data, it’s interesting to think about how far back in the universe this record-breaking space telescope can see and if it can see the Big Bang itself.
“In principle JWST can detect galaxies at redshifts greater than 20, less than 200 million years after the Big Bang,” explains Bowler. “These galaxies will likely be extremely hard to find, but the detection of CERRS 93316 gives us hope that they may exist. Watch this space!”
“The most distant phenomenon observed is the cosmic microwave background (CMB) which is the ‘afterglow’ of the Big Bang,” explains Donnan. “The light from the CMB comes from approximately 400,000 years after the Big Bang and has been observed by various instruments over the years – most notably the Planck satellite which launched in 2009. Webb won’t be able to see as far back as that, but it is able to probe the earliest stages of galaxy formation.”
Donnan and Bowler both said that no more observations are planned for CEERS-93316, but they hope that will change in the future.
Redshift is a part of the Doppler effect, which is used by astronomers to measure how far things are in the universe. A common way to show the Doppler effect is by showing how the pitch of a sound wave changes as a loud object moves toward you and then away from you. This is often done with an ambulance or other emergency vehicle. The sound waves as the object moves away from you are called blueshift, and the sound waves as the object moves toward you are called redshift. With this new study setting a new redshift record, scientists have measured the farthest object in the universe to date.
MNRAS and Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science Survey is a reference.
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