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Hubble unmasks ghost galaxies

Researchers found that three small galaxies all started forming stars and then abruptly stopped, all in the first billion years after the Big Bang.
By STScl, Baltimore, Maryland Published: July 11, 2012
Ultra-faint-dwarf-galaxy
Astronomers used the Hubble Space Telescope to unmask the dim, star-starved dwarf galaxy Leo IV. These Hubble images demonstrate why astronomers had a tough time spotting this small-fry galaxy. Image credit: NASA/ESA/T. Brown (STScI)
Astronomers have puzzled over why some puny, extremely faint dwarf galaxies spotted in our Milky Way Galaxy's backyard contain so few stars.

These ghost-like galaxies are thought to be some of the tiniest, oldest, and most pristine galaxies in the universe. They have been discovered over the past decade by astronomers using automated computer techniques to search through the images of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. But astronomers needed NASA's Hubble Space Telescope to help solve the mystery of these star-starved galaxies.

Hubble’s views of three of the small-fry galaxies reveal that their stars share the same birth date. The galaxies all started forming stars more than 13 billion years ago — and then abruptly stopped — all in the first billion years after the universe was born in the Big Bang.

The relic galaxies are evidence for a transitional phase in the early universe that shut down star-making factories in tiny galaxies. During this time, the first stars burned off a fog of cold hydrogen in a process called reionization.

"These galaxies are all ancient, and they're all the same age, so you know something came down like a guillotine and turned off the star formation at the same time in these galaxies," said Tom Brown of the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Maryland. "The most likely explanation is reionization."

The reionization of the universe began in the first billion years after the Big Bang. During this epoch, radiation from the first stars knocked electrons off primeval hydrogen atoms, ionizing the cool hydrogen gas. This process allowed the hydrogen gas to become transparent to ultraviolet light.

Ironically, the same radiation that sparked universal reionization appears to have squelched star-making activities in dwarf galaxies, such as those in Brown's study. The small irregular galaxies were born about 100 million years before reionization began and had just started to churn out stars. Roughly 2,000 light-years wide, the galaxies are the smaller cousins of the more luminous star-making dwarf galaxies near our Milky Way. Unlike their larger relatives, the puny galaxies were not massive enough to shield themselves from the harsh ultraviolet light. What little gas they had was stripped away as the flood of ultraviolet light rushed through them. Their gas supply depleted, the galaxies could not make new stars.

The discovery could help explain the so-called "missing satellite problem," where only a few dozen dwarf galaxies have been observed around the Milky Way while computer simulations predict that thousands should exist. One possible explanation is that there has been very little or even no star formation in the smallest of these dwarf galaxies, making them difficult to detect.

The Sloan survey recently uncovered more than a dozen of these star-starved galaxies in our Milky Way's neighborhood while scanning just a quarter of the sky. Astronomers think the rest of the sky should contain dozens more of these objects, dubbed ultra-faint dwarf galaxies. The evidence for squelched star formation in some of the smallest of these dwarfs suggests that there may be thousands more where essentially no stars formed at all.

"By measuring the star formation histories of the observed dwarfs, Hubble has confirmed earlier theoretical predictions that star formation in the smallest clumps would be shut down by reionization," said Jason Tumlinson from the STScI.

"These are the fossils of the earliest galaxies in the universe," Brown said. "They haven't changed in billions of years. These galaxies are unlike most nearby galaxies, which have long star-formation histories."

The stellar populations in these fossil galaxies range from a few hundred to a few thousand stars, both fainter and brighter than our Sun. The galaxies may be star-deprived, but they have an abundance of dark matter, the underlying scaffolding upon which galaxies are built.

Normal dwarf galaxies near the Milky Way contain 10 times more dark matter than the ordinary matter that makes up gas and stars. In ultra-faint dwarf galaxies, dark matter outweighs ordinary matter by at least a factor of 100. "The small galaxies in our study are made up mostly of dark matter because their hydrogen gas was ionized and the stars got turned off," Brown said.

These mostly dark-matter islands coexisted unseen with our Milky Way for billions of years until astronomers began finding them in the Sloan survey.

When these galaxies were uncovered, astronomers began proposing many reasons for their shortage of stars. Some believed that internal dynamics, such as a supernova blast, blew out the gas needed to create more stars. Others suggested that the galaxies simply used up what little gas they had. And a few thought that the galaxies were born during the early universe and reionization had turned off their star formation.

Then, ground-based observations of two of the newly discovered galaxies revealed tantalizing evidence that the stars were indeed ancient. So Brown decided to use Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys to look deep inside six of the galaxies to study the population of stars and determine when they were born. So far, Brown and his team have finished analyzing the Hubble data of three of the galaxies, named Hercules, Leo IV, and Ursa Major. The galaxies' distance from Earth ranges from 330,000 light-years to 490,000 light-years.

"Astronomers have said before that certain galaxies should be ancient, and then someone studies them hard enough and finds younger stars," Brown said. "Some of us expected to uncover younger stars and prove that the galaxies are not relics from the early universe. We were surprised to find that all the stars were ancient."

Brown measured the stars' ages by analyzing their brightness and colors. For reference, Brown compared the galaxies' stars with the stars in the ancient globular cluster M92, located 26,000 light-years away. M92 is more than 13 billion years old, one of the oldest objects in the universe. The analysis revealed that the galaxies' stars are as old as those in M92.

"The stars in the ultra-faint dwarf galaxies are very sparse," Brown said. "This is one reason why no one went after them with Hubble. However, we thought they were good targets for Hubble, given Hubble's ability to measure precise ages. You look at the Hubble images, and there are almost no stars, but the ones we have are enough to give us the ages of these galaxies."

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5 stars
ERIK NELSON from WASHINGTON said:
Many prominent textbooks on galaxy formation & evolution seemingly favor the hypothesis that:

"internal dynamics, such as a supernova blast, blew out the gas needed to create more stars"

If so, then small galaxies, and large (globular) star clusters, were all born in single "bursts" of star formation, whose combined effects (radiation, star winds, supernovae) soon dispersed much of the material, so quenching star formation. By similar means, smaller (open) star clusters, in our own galaxy disk, also disperse their parent gas clouds.
2 stars
CHRIS R BAKER from CALIFORNIA said:
It would be mighty helpful if the photo would have an arrow or a circle or something to indicate what exactly I'm supposed to look at. And also, what is the difference between a globular cluster orbiting the Milky Way galaxy and a dwarf galaxy other than shape? How big does a cluster of stars have to be before it gets classed as a galaxy. Kind of like how big does a planet have to be before it can actually be called a planet as opposed to a dwarf planet?
4 stars
MR RONALD BRANT from CALIFORNIA said:
By definition, if these "galaxies" don't have stars, or extremely few, they should not be classified as galaxies. Perhaps we need a new classification.
5 stars
GERARDO W FISCHER said:
I am amazed how we are now able to look back 13 * 10*9 years in time, and already some stars had formed and - of course! - the so-called black matter (is it matter or just void gravitational field?).
5 stars
BILL SIMPSON from LOUISIANA said:
Why didn't it happen in the larger galaxies again? I got hung up in the re ionization epoch. Then looking at the graph on an MIT site made me wonder if there almost had to be an infinite number of Big Bangs. ( I got lost in the 'scattering' explanation on the Wikipedia re-ionization discussion. Something to do with energy transfer, I think?) And you have to wonder why any structure formed after the BB. Are the other universes like ours, or is every one different? I doubt we will ever know. But who knows? In a few hundred years, quantum computing, artificial intelligence, and genetic engineering might go places in physics we can't now imagine. Or people could be back living in caves having not developed an affordable, scalable replacement for the fossil fuels. Burning them produces the vast majority of all the energy we use today. Ponder trying to replace that, as they are running out.
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