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Astronomers Detect the Earliest Galaxies

FiReaNGeL writes "Astronomers, using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, have uncovered a primordial population of compact and ultra-blue galaxies that have never been seen before. They are from 13 billion years ago, just 600 to 800 million years after the Big Bang. These newly found objects are crucial to understanding the evolutionary link between the birth of the first stars, the formation of the first galaxies, and the sequence of evolutionary events that resulted in the assembly of our Milky Way and the other 'mature' elliptical and majestic spiral galaxies in today's universe."

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  1. Re:Ultra-Blue? by camperdave · · Score: 5, Informative

    A few basic Astronomy tidbits for you:

    Elements emit light at characteristic colors - frequencies of light. Eg, copper emits a bluish green color. By looking at the spectrum of the object, you can tell what the object is made of. If an object is moving, the spectrum will be shifted relative to normal due to the doppler effect. If it is shifted to higher frequencies the object is approaching you. If the spectrum is red shifted, it is moving away. The greater the shift, the greater the velocity.

    Certain stars are close enough to Earth that we can triangulate their distance, using the orbit of the earth as the base of the triange. There is a certain class of star called a cepheid variable, some of which are in triangulateable range. Cepheids give off regular bursts of light, and due to the process by which they do that, the amount of light they give off is proportional to the frequency of the bursts. By using the inverse square law you can tell how far away a cepheid is by its brightness.

    Thus, you can tell how far away a galaxy is by looking at its cepheid stars. So, by careful observation, you can detect the composition, speed, direction, distance, and age of a star. By looking at many stars, you can detect patterns like: the farther away a star is, the faster it is moving away from us.

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