Hubble Astronomers Uncover An Overheated Early Universe

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Oct. 07, 2010

J.D. Harrington 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-5241 
j.d.harrington@xxxxxxxx 

Ray Villard 
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore 
410-338-4514 
villard@xxxxxxxxx 

Michael Shull 
University of Colorado, Boulder, Colo. 
303-492-7827 
michael.shull@xxxxxxxxxxxx   


RELEASE: 10-243

HUBBLE ASTRONOMERS UNCOVER AN OVERHEATED EARLY UNIVERSE

WASHINGTON -- During a period of universal warming 11 billion years 
ago, quasars -- the brilliant core of active galaxies -- produced 
fierce radiation blasts that stunted the growth of some dwarf 
galaxies for approximately 500 million years. 

This important conclusion comes from a team of astronomers that used 
the new capabilities of NASA's Hubble Space Telescope to probe the 
invisible, remote universe. The team's results will be published in 
the October 10 issue of The Astrophysical Journal. 

Using Hubble's Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS), the astronomers 
identified this era, from 11.7 to 11.3 billion years ago, when the 
ultraviolet light emitted by active galaxies stripped electrons off 
helium atoms. The process, known as ionization, heated the 
intergalactic helium from 18,000 degrees Fahrenheit to nearly 40,000 
degrees. This inhibited the gas from gravitationally collapsing to 
form new generations of stars in some small galaxies. 

Because of its greatly improved sensitivity and lower background 
"noise" compared to previous spectrographs in space, the COS 
observations were ground-breaking. The observations allowed 
scientists to produce more detailed measurements of the intergalactic 
helium than previously possible. 

"These COS results yield new insight into an important phase in the 
history of our universe," said Hubble Program Scientist Eric Smith at 
NASA Headquarters in Washington. 

Michael Shull of the University of Colorado in Boulder and his team 
studied the spectrum of ultraviolet light produced by a quasar and 
found signs of ionized helium. This beacon, like a headlight shining 
through fog, travels through interspersed clouds of otherwise 
invisible gas and allows for a core sample of the gas clouds. 

The universe went through an initial heat wave more than 13 billion 
years ago when energy from early massive stars ionized cold 
interstellar hydrogen from the big bang. This epoch is called 
reionization, because the hydrogen nuclei originally were in an 
ionized state shortly after the big bang. 

The Hubble team found it would take another two billion years before 
the universe produced sources of ultraviolet radiation with enough 
energy to reionize the primordial helium that also was cooked up in 
the big bang. This radiation didn't come from stars, but rather from 
super massive black holes. The black holes furiously converted some 
of the gravitational energy of this mass to powerful ultraviolet 
radiation that blazed out of these active galaxies. 

The helium's reionization occurred at a transitional time in the 
universe's history when galaxies collided to ignite quasars. After 
the helium was reionized, intergalactic gas again cooled down and 
dwarf galaxies could resume normal assembly. 

"I imagine quite a few more dwarf galaxies may have formed if helium 
reionization had not taken place," Shull said. 

So far, Shull and his team only have one perspective to measure the 
helium transition to its ionized state. However, the COS science team 
plans to use Hubble to look in other directions to determine if 
helium reionization uniformly took place across the universe. 

For illustrations and more information about these results, visit: 



http://hubblesite.org/news/2010/31 




and 




http://www.nasa.gov/hubble   

	
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