Webb — custom - built to study these murky epochs — could use gravitational lensing to unveil these and even
older galaxies in sufficient detail and number to pin down exactly how these ancient objects arose and first brought light into the universe.
Despite ongoing delays, the JWT promises to take us even closer to the edge of time and space, delivering a new perspective on some of
the oldest galaxies in the universe, potentially just a few hundred million years after the big bang.
Not exact matches
They honestly believe that an infinitely -
old, never - dying being, powerful enough to create the entire Universe and its billions of
galaxies, has a personal interest
in their $ ex lives.
Second: The Creation tale is simply a way for early humans to explain mans creation and «fall» from God's predetermined path... The
old testament is full of stuff more related to philosophy and health advice then «Gods word» However, this revelation has not made me less of a christian...
In Contrast to those stuck in «the old ways» regarding faith (not believing in neanderthals and championing the claim that earth is only 6000 years old), I believe God created the universe on the very principle of physics and evolution (and other sciencey stuff)... Thus the first clash of atoms was the first step in the billionyear long recipe in creating the universe, the galaxies, the stars, the planets, life itself and u
In Contrast to those stuck
in «the old ways» regarding faith (not believing in neanderthals and championing the claim that earth is only 6000 years old), I believe God created the universe on the very principle of physics and evolution (and other sciencey stuff)... Thus the first clash of atoms was the first step in the billionyear long recipe in creating the universe, the galaxies, the stars, the planets, life itself and u
in «the
old ways» regarding faith (not believing
in neanderthals and championing the claim that earth is only 6000 years old), I believe God created the universe on the very principle of physics and evolution (and other sciencey stuff)... Thus the first clash of atoms was the first step in the billionyear long recipe in creating the universe, the galaxies, the stars, the planets, life itself and u
in neanderthals and championing the claim that earth is only 6000 years
old), I believe God created the universe on the very principle of physics and evolution (and other sciencey stuff)... Thus the first clash of atoms was the first step
in the billionyear long recipe in creating the universe, the galaxies, the stars, the planets, life itself and u
in the billionyear long recipe
in creating the universe, the galaxies, the stars, the planets, life itself and u
in creating the universe, the
galaxies, the stars, the planets, life itself and us.
Let's face it, the belief that an infitely
old, all - knowing sky - god, powerful enough to create the entire Universe and its billions of
galaxies, will cause people to survive their own phsical deaths and live happily ever after
in heaven, if they follow some random laws laid down
in Bronze Age Palestine = Judaism.
But «logic» this; Of a God that created a universe that is about 12 billon years
old in extension, with millions of
galaxies like ours, containing billions of stars and planets.
Christianity is the belief that an infinitely -
old, all - kowing bieng, powerful enought to create the entire Universe and its billions of
galaxies, has a personal interest
in my $ ex life.
The belief that an infinitely
old, all - knowing sky - god, powerful enough to create the entire Universe and its billions of
galaxies, will cause people to survive their own physical deaths and live happily ever after
in heaven, if they follow some random laws laid down
in Bronze Age Palestine = Judaism.
FACT: The stars
in this
galaxy are just other suns, they are also
older than our sun.
The belief that an infitely
old, all - knowing sky - god, powerful enough to create the entire Universe and its billions of
galaxies, will cause people to survive their own phsical deaths and live happily ever after
in heaven, if they follow some random laws laid down
in Bronze Age Palestine = Judaism.
Yep you are right, I moved down here
in the state of Mississippi, north of Crystal Springs from Chicago when I was ten years
old but still I visit once
in a while, now it's twenty years and sad to not much has change, like the parts you said about non-whites discrimatory or rasicts at other non-whites, when I went to school here they treated me as a alien from another
galaxy, they pick at my voice cause I didn't had that southern dialog, unlike them I said my words correctly, but not just me, they even hated at others who had better intelect I am not picking at them, It is what I went through all these years, Mississippi and mainly this small town of Crystal Springs see America
in a crazy awful view, They don't like difference that even within they own race, ther not that politcal, when some one say God they got there vote, I don't to say much to waste your time, I still remember when I was ten years
old I had a constanct back ground check on me to see were I really come from evn though I had the paper saying Chicago Illinois barely no jobs but a church on every street for a town barely under five Thousand, till this very day, they look at me like I am a alien, did you ever had that experiance down here damn my keybroad mess up,
Christianity is the belief that an infinitely -
old, all - knowing, immortal being, powerful enough to create the entire Universe and its billions of
galaxies, has a personal interest
in my $ ex life.
The belief that an infinitely
old, all - knowing sky - god, powerful enough to create the entire Universe and its billions of
galaxies, chose a small nomadic group of Jews from the 200 million people then alive to be his «favored people» provided they followed some rural laws laid down
in Bronze Age Palestine equals Judaism.
TThe Andromeda
Galaxy (also known as Messier 31, M31, or NGC 224;
older texts often called it the Andromeda Nebula) is a spiral
galaxy approximately 2.5 million light - years away
in the constellation Andromeda.
When the cosmos was a few hundred million years
old, this gas coalesced into the earliest stars, which formed
in clusters that clumped together into
galaxies, the
oldest of which appears 400 million years after the universe was born.
«The outcome of the Auriga Project is that astronomers will now be able to use our work to access a wealth of information, such as the properties of the satellite
galaxies and the very
old stars found
in the halo that surrounds the
galaxy.»
Because all elements
in the universe heavier than hydrogen, helium, and lithium have been forged by nuclear fusion
in the cores of stars and then scattered into space by supernova explosions, the find indicates that the
galaxy, at the age we're now observing it, was
old enough for at least one generation of stars to have formed, lived, and died.
That massive group of stars, dubbed SXDF - NB1006 - 2, lies about 13.1 billion light - years from Earth and was the
oldest known
galaxy when it was discovered
in 2012 (a record that has been toppled several times since).
Large numbers of
galaxies are elliptical
in shape, red and mostly made up of
old stars.
One of the
oldest known
galaxies in the universe is now home to the
oldest oxygen yet spotted, a new study suggests.
The cool star's composition is tricky to study, but astronomers can look at 16 other stars
in the same «moving group», all of which orbit the
galaxy backwards and are very
old.
Some research has been done to deduce the chemical makeup of very early
galaxies, based on observations of very bright, distant
galaxies, or of very
old stars that formed
in the early universe and are still around today, Hewitt said.
The rotating stream of stars
in the
galaxy is entirely made up of
old stars and from their properties, researchers can draw conclusions about this dramatic cosmic event.
But short bursts form
in older galaxies where such supernovae are far less common.
When the Webb launches
in 2018, its gear will include a folding mirror and instruments that will work
in the infrared range of the electromagnetic spectrum to reveal the universe's
oldest galaxies.
Astrophysicist Nicolas Laporte of University College London and colleagues detected the dust
in a
galaxy seen as it was when the universe was only 600 million years
old.
But new observations from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have revealed ancient stars mingled with the young ones, proving the
galaxy as a whole is
in fact as
old as its neighbors.
Their simulations showed the vast polar structure breaking up and dispersing, indicating that the plane is not as
old as originally thought and formed later
in the evolution of the
galaxy.
When the universe was one - fifth of its current age — about 3 billion years
old —
galaxies were pumping out stars like mad, the equivalent of 100 suns per year — 100 times the rate
in our Milky Way today.
The leading suspects
in the half - century
old mystery of the origin of the highest - energy cosmic particles
in the universe were
in galaxies called «active galactic nuclei,» which have a super-radiating core region around the central supermassive black hole.
Dark matter permeates the cosmos: The material keeps
galaxies from flying apart and has left its imprints
in the
oldest light
in the universe, the cosmic microwave
Abraham's team used the huge Gemini North telescope
in Hawaii to search for extremely remote,
old - looking
galaxies whose reddish glow would have been largely blotted out by Earth's atmosphere.
One strong possibility is that the ultraviolet (UV) radiation from the first - generation
galaxies in the one - billion - year -
old Universe ionized the hydrogen gas.
Some stars
in globular clusters may be 15 billion years
old, he says, but the great bulge at the center of the Milky Way — a younger part of the
galaxy, according to conventional wisdom — actually holds stars that are 1 or 2 billion years
older.
Supernova explosions
in older, nearby
galaxies, says Lee, may have fertilized the nascent Milky Way — and
in particular its center — with some of the heavy elements we now find here.
But if the
oldest stars are at the center of the
galaxy rather than
in the halo, then something is wrong with the standard picture.
Ask most astronomers where to find the
oldest stars
in the
galaxy and they'll tell you to look at globular clusters, dense knots of stars that hover above and below the plane of the Milky Way.
This 13 - billion - year -
old galaxy (circled
in this image from Hubble) formed 700 million years after the Big Bang, but its light is just now reaching us.
If the
galaxies turn out to be very
old, a distinct possibility, it may mean that astronomers will have to revise not only their count of the number of
galaxies in the universe but the history of
galaxies as well.
Led by Sandra Savaglio and Karl Glazebrook of Johns Hopkins University
in Baltimore, Maryland, the team studied a few hundred
galaxies at distances of some 10 billion light - years, looking back to a time when the universe was only about 4 billion years
old.
This would explain why there seem to be stars and
galaxies that are too
old to have formed
in a Universe 15 billion years
old.
Hubble's WFC3 camera snapped images
in the near - infrared, revealing the spatial distribution of
older stars within the actively star - forming
galaxies.
Tarter's curiosity about life on other worlds erupted
in the 1970s, fueled by a serendipitous merging of her ability to program a very
old computer (a PDP - 8 / S — «I always thought the «S» stood for «stupid,»» she says), with a forward - looking proposal to find out whether other communicating civilizations exist
in the
galaxy.
This discovery is a vital clue
in a 30 - year -
old mystery: identifying the source of a faint infrared glow that permeates the Milky Way and other
galaxies.
Living with his parents and 6 - year -
old sister
in Lafayette, California, a scenic town east of San Francisco, he was a science fiction fan who aspired to explore the
galaxy and devoured Isaac Asimov books.
When looking through 15 - year -
old radio data from several observatories
in 2013, astronomers found clumpy segments along a ring shape
in our
galaxy; when they searched for it
in visible light, they came up empty.
The final picture shows the
galaxies that form
in the model, colour coded according to age so that red objects are the
oldest, yellow ones are intermediate and blue are the youngest.
That should translate into about 60 supernova remnants
in the
galaxy that are under 2000 years
old, after which they begin to fade away and become undetectable.
Lead researcher Dr David Clements, from the Department of Physics at Imperial College London, explains: «Although we're able to see individual
galaxies that go further back
in time, up to now, the most distant clusters found by astronomers date back to when the universe was 4.5 billion years
old.
Now,
in a much larger study and using a different technique, astronomer Michele Cappellari of the University of Oxford
in the United Kingdom and his colleagues have confirmed and strengthened the conclusion that
old galaxies formed a plethora of little stars.