Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Early universe 'warmed up' later than previously believed

A new study from Tel Aviv University reveals that black holes, formed from the first stars in our universe, heated the gas throughout space later than previously thought. 

They also imprinted a clear signature in radio waves which astronomers can now search for. 

The work is a major new finding about the origins of the universe.

"One of the exciting frontiers in astronomy is the era of the formation of the first stars," explains Prof. Rennan Barkana of TAU's School of Physics and Astronomy, an author of the study.

Rennan Barkana
"Since the universe was filled with hydrogen atoms at that time, the most promising method for observing the epoch of the first stars is by measuring the emission of hydrogen using radio waves."

The study, just published in the journal Nature, was co-authored by Dr. Anastasia Fialkov of TAU and the École Normale Supérieure in Paris and Dr. Eli Visbal of Columbia and Harvard Universities.

Cosmic archaeology
Astronomers explore our distant past, billions of years back in time. Unlike Earth-bound archaeologists, however, who can only study remnants of the past, astronomers can see the past directly.

The light from distant objects takes a long time to reach the earth, and astronomers can see these objects as they were back when that light was emitted.

Anastasia Fialkov
This means that if astronomers look out far enough, they can see the first stars as they actually were in the early universe.

Thus, the new finding that cosmic heating occurred later than previously thought means that observers do not have to search as far, and it will be easier to see this cosmic milestone.

Cosmic heating may offer a way to directly investigate the earliest black holes, since it was likely driven by star systems called "black-hole binaries."

These are pairs of stars in which the larger star ended its life with a supernova explosion that left a black-hole remnant in its place.

Gas from the companion star is pulled in towards the black hole, gets ripped apart in the strong gravity, and emits high-energy X-ray radiation.

This radiation reaches large distances, and is believed to have re-heated the cosmic gas, after it had cooled down as a result of the original cosmic expansion.

The discovery in the new research is the delay of this heating.

More information: 'The observable signature of late heating of the Universe during cosmic reionization' dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature12999

No comments:

Post a Comment