An artist’s conception of star-bursting galaxies in the early universe, with stars and galaxies shown as bright white points of light.—Reuters
An artist’s conception of star-bursting galaxies in the early universe, with stars and galaxies shown as bright white points of light.—Reuters

WASHINGTON: The James Webb Space Telescope has provided an astonishing glimpse of the early history of our universe, spotting a collection of galaxies dating to the enigmatic epoch called cosmic dawn.

But the existence of what appear to be massive and mature galaxies during the universe’s infancy defied expectations.

This left scientists scrambling for an explanation, while questioning the basic tenets of cosmology, the science of the origin and development of the universe.

Now, a new study may resolve the mystery without ripping up the textbooks. Researchers used sophisticated computer simulations to model how the earliest galaxies evolved.

These indicated that star formation unfolded differently in these galaxies in the first few hundred million years after the Big Bang than it does in large galaxies like our Milky Way today.

According to the study, these galaxies may have been relatively small, as expected, but might glow just as brightly as massive galaxies giving a deceptive impression of great mass because of brilliant bursts of star formation.

“Astronomers can securely measure how bright those early galaxies are because photons (particles of light) are directly detectable and countable, whereas it is much more difficult to tell whether those galaxies are really big or massive. They appear to be big because they are observed to be bright,” said Guochao Sun, a postdoctoral fellow in astronomy at North-western University in Illinois and lead author of the study published this week in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Published in Dawn, October 7th, 2023

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