courses:ast403:jwst-early-galaxies
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| courses:ast403:jwst-early-galaxies [2026/03/26 08:00] – shuvo | courses:ast403:jwst-early-galaxies [2026/03/28 01:23] (current) – [Record-Breaking Discoveries: The JADES Survey] shuvo | ||
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| Astronomers use the exact same logic as optical dropouts, but scaled up to JWST's infrared filters: | Astronomers use the exact same logic as optical dropouts, but scaled up to JWST's infrared filters: | ||
| - | **Finding a $z \approx 10$ Galaxy:** The Lyman break is shifted to about $1.0 \mu m$. The galaxy will be completely invisible in the F090W filter, but will suddenly appear in the F115W filter and beyond. This is an **F090W-dropout**.\\ | + | **Finding a $z \approx 10$ Galaxy:** The Lyman break is shifted to about $1.0 \mu m$. The galaxy will be completely invisible in the F090W filter, but will suddenly appear in the F115W filter and beyond. This is an F090W-dropout.\\ |
| - | * **Finding a $z \approx 13$ Galaxy:** The break shifts to roughly $1.27 \mu m$. The galaxy now drops out of both the F090W and F115W filters, but lights up in the F150W filter. This is an **F115W-dropout**. | + | * **Finding a $z \approx 13$ Galaxy:** The break shifts to roughly $1.27 \mu m$. The galaxy now drops out of both the F090W and F115W filters, but lights up in the F150W filter. This is an F115W-dropout. |
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| ===== Record-Breaking Discoveries: | ===== Record-Breaking Discoveries: | ||
| This specific technique has allowed JWST to shatter distance records almost immediately after it began operations. | This specific technique has allowed JWST to shatter distance records almost immediately after it began operations. | ||
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| * Its Lyman-break is pushed so far into the infrared that it doesn' | * Its Lyman-break is pushed so far into the infrared that it doesn' | ||
| - | By combining the simple but brilliant physics of the Lyman-break with the sheer infrared power of JWST, astronomers are finally able to map the very edge of the observable universe. | + | By combining the simple but brilliant physics of the Lyman-break with the sheer infrared power of JWST, astronomers are finally able to map the very edge of the observable |
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| + | ===== Implications on Galaxy Evolution ===== | ||
| + | Looking at galaxies in the early universe—like those in the $z > 10$ range found by JWST—is not just about looking farther away; it is about looking back in time to when the universe was less than 500 million years old. | ||
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| + | Because we are seeing them in their infancy, these primordial galaxies look and behave fundamentally differently from mature, modern galaxies like our Milky Way. | ||
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| + | Here is how the " | ||
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| + | **Size and Structure: From " | ||
| + | **\\ | ||
| + | If you look at the Milky Way, it is a majestic, highly organized structure: a central bulge, a flat disk, and grand spiral arms spanning roughly 100,000 light-years across. | ||
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| + | Early galaxies look nothing like this: \\ | ||
| + | //Tiny and Compact:// High-redshift galaxies are incredibly small. While the Milky Way is massive, these early galaxies are often only a few hundred to a few thousand light-years across—sometimes smaller than a single star cluster in our own galaxy.\\ | ||
| + | //Chaotic and Irregular:// | ||
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| + | **Chemical Composition: | ||
| + | **\\ | ||
| + | Astronomers refer to any element heavier than hydrogen and helium as a " | ||
| + | //Modern Galaxies (High Metallicity):// | ||
| + | //Early Galaxies (Low Metallicity):// | ||
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| + | **Star Formation: Bursty vs. Steady | ||
| + | **\\ | ||
| + | The rate at which galaxies build new stars changes drastically over cosmic time. | ||
| + | //Steady or Dead (Today):// The Milky Way is relatively quiet, forming only about 1 to 2 new stars per year. Many massive modern galaxies are completely " | ||
| + | //Furious and Bursty (Early Universe):// | ||
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| + | **The Big JWST Surprise: "Too Bright, Too Early" | ||
| + | **\\ | ||
| + | Before JWST launched, standard cosmological models predicted that galaxies slowly assembled piece by piece. Astronomers expected galaxies at $z > 10$ to be incredibly faint, fragile, and low-mass. | ||
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| + | However, JWST observations have flipped this expectation on its head. Many of these early galaxies (like JADES-GS-z14-0) are surprisingly bright and appear much more massive than models predicted they could be so soon after the Big Bang. | ||
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| + | Astrophysicists are currently debating why this is:\\ | ||
| + | * Are they actually massive, meaning black holes and galaxies grew at impossible speeds?\\ | ||
| + | * Or are they just temporarily ultra-bright because of extreme bursts of star formation or different types of exotic early stars? | ||
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| + | Ultimately, to get from the tiny, clumpy, hyperactive blobs of the early universe to the majestic Milky Way, these early galaxies had to undergo billions of years of violent mergers, cannibalizing their neighbors to slowly build up the mass and structure we see today. | ||
courses/ast403/jwst-early-galaxies.1774533610.txt.gz · Last modified: by shuvo
