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Webb discovers the incredibly distant galaxy JADES-GS-z13-1 in mysteriously clearing fog of early Universe

Using the unique infrared sensitivity of the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope, researchers can examine ancient galaxies to probe secrets of the early universe. Now, an international team of astronomers has identified bright hydrogen emission from a galaxy in an unexpectedly early time in the Universe’s history. The surprise finding is challenging researchers to explain how this light could have pierced the thick fog of neutral hydrogen that filled space at that time.

A small, zoomed-in area of deep space. Numerous galaxies in various shapes are visible, most of them small, but two are quite large and glow brightly. In the very centre is a small red dot, an extremely faraway galaxy. Two lines of light enter the left side: these are diffraction spikes, visual artefacts, caused by a nearby bright star just out of view.
The incredibly distant galaxy GS-z13-1, observed just 330 million years after the Big Bang, was initially discovered with deep imaging from the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope. Now, an international team of astronomers has definitively identified powerful hydrogen emission from this galaxy at an unexpectedly early period in the Universe’s history, a probable sign that we are seeing some of the first hot stars from the dawn of the Universe. This image shows the galaxy GS-z13-1 (the red dot at centre), imaged with Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) as part of the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey (JADES) programme. These data from NIRCam allowed researchers to identify GS-z13-1 as an incredibly distant galaxy, and to put an estimate on its redshift value. Webb’s unique infrared sensitivity is necessary to observe galaxies at this extreme distance, whose light has been redshifted into infrared wavelengths during its long journey across the cosmos.
To confirm the galaxy’s redshift, the team turned to Webb’s Near-Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec) instrument. With new observations permitting advanced spectroscopy of the galaxy’s emitted light, the team not only confirmed GS-z13-1’s redshift of 13.0, they also revealed the strong presence of a type of ultraviolet radiation called Lyman-α emission. This is a telltale sign of the presence of newly forming stars, or a possible active galactic nucleus in the galaxy, but at a much earlier time than astronomers had thought possible. The result holds great implications for our understanding of the Universe.
Credit: ESA/Webb, NASA, STScI, CSA, JADES Collaboration, Brant Robertson (UC Santa Cruz), Ben Johnson (CfA), Sandro Tacchella (Cambridge), Phill Cargile (CfA), J. Witstok, P. Jakobsen, A. Pagan (STScI), M. Zamani (ESA/Webb)

A key science goal of the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope has been to see further than ever before into the distant past of our Universe, when the first galaxies were forming after the Big Bang. This search has already yielded record-breaking galaxies, in observing programmes such as the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey (JADES). Webb’s extraordinary sensitivity to infrared light also opens entirely new avenues of research into when and how such galaxies formed, and their effects on the Universe at the time known as cosmic dawn. Researchers studying one of those very early galaxies have now made a discovery in the spectrum of its light, that challenges our established understanding of the Universe’s early history.

Webb discovered the incredibly distant galaxy JADES-GS-z13-1, observed to be at just 330 million years after the Big Bang, in images taken by Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) as part of the JADES programme. Researchers used the galaxy’s brightness in different infrared filters to estimate its redshift, which measures a galaxy’s distance from Earth based on how its light has been stretched out during its journey through expanding space.

The spectrum of light from the distant galaxy JADES-GS-z13-1 is graphed as a line from left (lower wavelengths) to right (higher wavelengths). The line rises where a wavelength in the spectrum is brighter, and falls where it is dimmer. A vertical red line labelled “Lyman-alpha emission z=13.05” marks a wavelength in the spectrum where there is a noticeable spike in brightness. The graph is labelled “NIRSpec | PRISM”.
The incredibly distant galaxy GS-z13-1, observed just 330 million years after the Big Bang, was initially discovered with deep imaging from the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope. Now, an international team of astronomers has definitively identified powerful hydrogen emission from this galaxy at an unexpectedly early period in the Universe’s history, a probable sign that we are seeing some of the first hot stars from the dawn of the Universe. Data from NIRCam allowed researchers to identify GS-z13-1 as an incredibly distant galaxy, and to put an estimate on its redshift value. Webb’s unique infrared sensitivity is necessary to observe galaxies at this extreme distance, whose light has been redshifted into infrared wavelengths during its long journey across the cosmos.
To confirm the galaxy’s redshift, the team turned to Webb’s Near-Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec) instrument. This graphic shows the light from galaxy GS-z13-1, dispersed by NIRSpec into its component near-infrared wavelengths. This graphic indicates very bright Lyman-α emission from the galaxy, which has been redshifted to an infrared wavelength. Not only does this emission in GS-z13-1’s spectrum confirm the galaxy’s extreme redshift, it is a telltale sign of the presence of newly forming stars, or a possible active galactic nucleus in the galaxy. Appearing at a much earlier time than astronomers had thought possible, the discovery of this Lyman-α emission holds great implications for our understanding of the Universe.
Credit: ESA/Webb, NASA, CSA, STScI, J. Olmsted (STScI), S. Carniani (Scuola Normale Superiore), P. Jakobsen

The NIRCam imaging yielded an initial redshift estimate of 12.9. Seeking to confirm its extreme redshift, an international team led by Joris Witstok of the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom as well as the Cosmic Dawn Center and the University of Copenhagen in Denmark, then observed the galaxy using Webb’s Near-Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec) instrument.

An area of deep space is covered by a scattering of galaxies in many shapes and in colours ranging from blue to whitish to orange, as well as a few nearby stars. A very small square is shown zoomed in, in a box to the left. In the centre a red dot, a faraway galaxy, is marked out by lines and labelled “Redshift (z)=13”, signifying its extreme distance. Two much larger galaxies are labelled “z=0.63” and “z=0.70”. The box is titled “JADES-GS-z13-1”.
The incredibly distant galaxy GS-z13-1, observed just 330 million years after the Big Bang, was initially discovered with deep imaging from the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope. Now, an international team of astronomers has definitively identified powerful hydrogen emission from this galaxy at an unexpectedly early period in the Universe’s history, a probable sign that we are seeing some of the first hot stars from the dawn of the Universe. This image shows the location of the galaxy GS-z13-1 in the GOODS-S field, as well as the galaxy itself, imaged with Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) as part of the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey (JADES) programme. These data from NIRCam allowed researchers to identify GS-z13-1 as an incredibly distant galaxy, and to put an estimate on its redshift value. Webb’s unique infrared sensitivity is necessary to observe galaxies at this extreme distance, whose light has been redshifted into infrared wavelengths during its long journey across the cosmos.
To confirm the galaxy’s redshift, the team turned to Webb’s Near-Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec) instrument. With new observations permitting advanced spectroscopy of the galaxy’s emitted light, the team not only confirmed GS-z13-1’s redshift of 13.0, they also revealed the strong presence of a type of ultraviolet radiation called Lyman-α emission. This is a telltale sign of the presence of newly forming stars, or a possible active galactic nucleus in the galaxy, but at a much earlier time than astronomers had thought possible. The result holds great implications for our understanding of the Universe.
Credit: ESA/Webb, NASA, STScI, CSA, JADES Collaboration, Brant Robertson (UC Santa Cruz), Ben Johnson (CfA), Sandro Tacchella (Cambridge), Phill Cargile (CfA), J. Witstok, P. Jakobsen, A. Pagan (STScI), M. Zamani (ESA/Webb)

In the resulting spectrum, the redshift was confirmed to be 13.0. This equates to a galaxy seen just 330 million years after the Big Bang, a small fraction of the Universe’s present age of 13.8 billion years old. But an unexpected feature stood out as well: one specific, distinctly bright wavelength of light, identified as the Lyman-α emission radiated by hydrogen atoms.[1] This emission was far stronger than astronomers thought possible at this early stage in the Universe’s development.

The early Universe was bathed in a thick fog of neutral hydrogen,” explained Roberto Maiolino, a team member from the University of Cambridge and University College London. “Most of this haze was lifted in a process called reionisation, which was completed about one billion years after the Big Bang. GS-z13-1 is seen when the Universe was only 330 million years old, yet it shows a surprisingly clear, telltale signature of Lyman-α emission that can only be seen once the surrounding fog has fully lifted. This result was totally unexpected by theories of early galaxy formation and has caught astronomers by surprise.”

Before and during the epoch of reionisation [2], the immense amounts of neutral hydrogen fog surrounding galaxies blocked any energetic ultraviolet light they emitted, much like the filtering effect of coloured glass. Until enough stars had formed and were able to ionise the hydrogen gas, no such light — including Lyman-α emission — could escape from these fledgling galaxies to reach Earth. The confirmation of Lyman-α radiation from this galaxy, therefore, has great implications for our understanding of the early Universe. Team member Kevin Hainline of the University of Arizona in the United States, says

We really shouldn’t have found a galaxy like this, given our understanding of the way the Universe has evolved. We could think of the early Universe as shrouded with a thick fog that would make it exceedingly difficult to find even powerful lighthouses peeking through, yet here we see the beam of light from this galaxy piercing the veil. This fascinating emission line has huge ramifications for how and when the Universe reionised.

The source of the Lyman-α radiation from this galaxy is not yet known, but it is may include the first light from the earliest generation of stars to form in the Universe. Witstok elaborates:

The large bubble of ionised hydrogen surrounding this galaxy might have been created by a peculiar population of stars — much more massive, hotter and more luminous than stars formed at later epochs, and possibly representative of the first generation of stars”.

A powerful active galactic nucleus (AGN) [3], driven by one of the first supermassive black holes, is another possibility identified by the team.

The new results could not have been obtained without the incredible near-infrared sensitivity of Webb, necessary not only to find such distant galaxies but also to examine their spectra in fine detail. Former NIRSpec Project Scientist, Peter Jakobsen of the Cosmic Dawn Center and the University of Copenhagen in Denmark, recalls:

“Following in the footsteps of the Hubble Space Telescope, it was clear Webb would be capable of finding ever more distant galaxies. As demonstrated by the case of GS-z13-1, however, it was always going to be a surprise what it might reveal about the nature of the nascent stars and black holes that are formed at the brink of cosmic time.”

The team plans further follow-up observations of GS-z13-1, aiming to obtain more information about the nature of this galaxy and origin of its strong Lyman-α radiation. Whatever the galaxy is concealing, it is certain to illuminate a new frontier in cosmology.

This new research has been published today in Nature. The data for this result were captured as part of JADES under JWST programmes #1180 (PI: D. J. Eisenstein), #1210, #1286 and #1287 (PI: N. Luetzgendorf), and the JADES Origin Field programme #3215 (PIs: Eisenstein and R. Maiolino).

An area of deep space is covered by a scattering of galaxies in many shapes and in colours ranging from blue to whitish to orange, as well as a few nearby stars. A very small square is shown zoomed in, in a box to the left. In the centre a red dot, a faraway galaxy, is the featured galaxy JADES-GS-z13-1.
The incredibly distant galaxy JADES-GS-z13-1, observed just 330 million years after the Big Bang, was initially discovered with deep imaging from the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope. Now, an international team of astronomers has definitively identified powerful hydrogen emission from this galaxy at an unexpectedly early period in the Universe’s history, a probable sign that we are seeing some of the first hot stars from the dawn of the Universe. This image shows the location of the galaxy GS-z13-1 in the GOODS-S field, as well as the galaxy itself, imaged with Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) as part of the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey (JADES) programme. These data from NIRCam allowed researchers to identify GS-z13-1 as an incredibly distant galaxy, and to put an estimate on its redshift value. Webb’s unique infrared sensitivity is necessary to observe galaxies at this extreme distance, whose light has been redshifted into infrared wavelengths during its long journey across the cosmos.
To confirm the galaxy’s redshift, the team turned to Webb’s Near-Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec) instrument. With new observations permitting advanced spectroscopy of the galaxy’s emitted light, the team not only confirmed GS-z13-1’s redshift of 13.0, they also revealed the strong presence of a type of ultraviolet radiation called Lyman-α emission. This is a telltale sign of the presence of newly forming stars, or a possible active galactic nucleus in the galaxy, but at a much earlier time than astronomers had thought possible. The result holds great implications for our understanding of the Universe.
Credit: ESA/Webb, NASA & CSA, JADES Collaboration, J. Witstok, P. Jakobsen, A. Pagan (STScI), M. Zamani (ESA/Webb)

Notes

[1] The name comes from the fact that a hydrogen atom emits a characteristic wavelength of light, known as “Lyman-alpha” radiation, that is produced when its electron drops from the second-lowest to the lowest orbit around the nucleus (energy level).

[2] The epoch of reionisation was a very early stage in the Universe’s history that took place after recombination (the first stage following the Big Bang). During recombination, the Universe cooled enough that electrons and protons began to combine to form neutral hydrogen atoms. Reionisation began when denser clouds of gas started to form, creating stars and eventually entire galaxies. They produced large amounts of ultraviolet photons, which gradually reionised the hydrogen gas. As neutral hydrogen gas is opaque to energetic ultraviolet light, we can only see galaxies during this epoch at longer wavelengths until they create a “bubble” of ionised gas around them, so that their ultraviolet light can escape through it and reach us.

[3] An active galactic nucleus is a region of extremely strong radiation at the centre of a galaxy. It is fuelled by an accretion disc, made of material orbiting and falling into a central supermassive black hole. The material crashes together as it spins around the black hole, heating to such extreme temperatures that it radiates highly energetic ultraviolet light and even X-rays, rivalling the brightness of the whole galaxy surrounding it.

 

Press release from ESA Webb.

Webb detects most distant black hole merger to date in the ZS7 galaxy system

An international team of astronomers have used the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope to find evidence for an ongoing merger of two galaxies and their massive black holes when the Universe was only 740 million years old. This marks the most distant detection of a black hole merger ever obtained and the first time that this phenomenon has been detected so early in the Universe.

Three panels are shown showing an increasingly small area of the PRIMER galaxy field. The first image shows a large field of galaxies on the black background of space. The second image shows a smaller region from this field, revealing the galaxies in closer detail, appearing in a variety of shapes and colours. The final image shows the ZS7 galaxy system, revealing the ionised hydrogen emission in orange and the doubly ionised oxygen emission in dark red.
This image shows the location of the galaxy system ZS7 from the JWST PRIMER programme (PI: J. Dunlop). New research using the NIRSpec instrument on the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope have determined the system to be evidence of an ongoing merger of two galaxies and their massive black holes when the Universe was only 740 million years old. This marks the most distant detection of a black hole merger ever obtained and the first time that this phenomenon has been detected so early in the Universe.
The team has found evidence for very dense gas with fast motions in the vicinity of the black hole, as well as hot and highly ionised gas illuminated by the energetic radiation typically produced by black holes in their accretion episodes. Webb also allowed the team to spatially separate the two black holes and determined that one of the two black holes has a mass that is 50 million times the mass of the Sun. The mass of the other black hole is likely similar, although it is harder to measure because this second black hole is buried in dense gas.
In this Webb NIRCam image, the ionised hydrogen (Hβ) emission in the ZS7 system is identified by the orange region and the doubly ionised oxygen (OIII) emission is visible in dark red (right image).
Credit: ESA/Webb, NASA, CSA, J. Dunlop, D. Magee, P. G. Pérez-González, H. Übler, R. Maiolino, et al.

Astronomers have found supermassive black holes with masses of millions to billions times that of the Sun in most massive galaxies in the local Universe, including in our Milky Way galaxy. These black holes have likely had a major impact on the evolution of the galaxies they reside in. However, scientists still don’t fully understand how these objects grew to become so massive. The finding of gargantuan black holes already in place in the first billion years after the Big Bang indicates that such growth must have happened very rapidly, and very early. Now, the James Webb Space Telescope is shedding new light on the growth of black holes in the early Universe.

The new Webb observations have provided evidence for an ongoing merger of two galaxies and their massive black holes when the Universe was just 740 million years old. The system is known as ZS7.

Massive black holes that are actively accreting matter have distinctive spectrographic features that allow astronomers to identify them. For very distant galaxies, like those in this study, these signatures are inaccessible from the ground and can only be seen with Webb.

“We found evidence for very dense gas with fast motions in the vicinity of the black hole, as well as hot and highly ionised gas illuminated by the energetic radiation typically produced by black holes in their accretion episodes,” explained lead author Hannah Übler of the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom. “Thanks to the unprecedented sharpness of its imaging capabilities, Webb also allowed our team to spatially separate the two black holes.”

The team found that one of the two black holes has a mass that is 50 million times the mass of the Sun.

“The mass of the other black hole is likely similar, although it is much harder to measure because this second black hole is buried in dense gas,” 

explained team member Roberto Maiolino of the University of Cambridge and University College London in the United Kingdom.

“Our findings suggest that merging is an important route through which black holes can rapidly grow, even at cosmic dawn,” explained Übler. “Together with other Webb findings of active, massive black holes in the distant Universe, our results also show that massive black holes have been shaping the evolution of galaxies from the very beginning.”

“The stellar mass of the system we studied is similar to that of our neighbor the Large Magellanic Cloud,” shared team member Pablo G. Pérez-González of the Centro de Astrobiología (CAB), CSIC/INTA, in Spain. “We can try to imagine how the evolution of merging galaxies could be affected if each galaxy had one super massive black hole as large or larger than the one we have in the Milky Way”. 

This image features the ZS7 galaxy system, showing a large field of hundreds of galaxies on the black background of space.
This image shows the environment of the galaxy system ZS7 from the JWST PRIMER programme (PI: J. Dunlop) as seen by Webb’s NIRCam instrument.
New research using the NIRSpec instrument on the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope has determined the system to be evidence of an ongoing merger of two galaxies and their massive black holes when the Universe was only 740 million years old. This marks the most distant detection of a black hole merger ever obtained and the first time that this phenomenon has been detected so early in the Universe.
The team has found evidence for very dense gas with fast motions in the vicinity of the black hole, as well as hot and highly ionised gas illuminated by the energetic radiation typically produced by black holes in their accretion episodes. Webb also allowed the team to spatially separate the two black holes and determined that one of the two black holes has a mass that is 50 million times the mass of the Sun. The mass of the other black hole is likely similar, although it is harder to measure because this second black hole is buried in dense gas.
Credit: ESA/Webb, NASA, CSA, J. Dunlop, D. Magee, P. G. Pérez-González, H. Übler, R. Maiolino, et al.

The team also notes that once the two black holes merge, they will also generate gravitational waves [1]. Events like this will be detectable with the next generation of gravitational wave observatories, such as the upcoming Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) mission, which was recently approved by the European Space Agency and will be the first space-based observatory dedicated to studying gravitational waves.

“Webb’s results are telling us that lighter systems detectable by LISA should be far more frequent than previously assumed,” shared LISA Lead Project Scientist Nora Luetzgendorf of the European Space Agency in the Netherlands. “It will most likely make us adjust our models for LISA rates in this mass range. This is just the tip of the iceberg.”

This discovery was from observations made as part of the Galaxy Assembly with NIRSpec Integral Field Spectroscopy programme. The team has recently been awarded a new Large Programme in Webb’s Cycle 3 of observations, to study in detail the relationship between massive black holes and their host galaxies in the first billion years. An important component of this programme will be to systematically search for and characterise black hole mergers. This effort will determine the rate at which black hole merging occurs at early cosmic epochs and will assess the role of merging in the early growth of black holes and the rate at which gravitational waves are produced from the dawn of time.

These results have been published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Notes

[1] Gravitational waves are invisible ripples in the fabric of spacetime. Spacetime is a four-dimensional quantity, described by Einstein’s general theory of relativity, which fuses three-dimensional space with time. Mass warps spacetime, and gravity is actually the result of spacetime being curved by an object’s mass. Ripples through spacetime are created by the movement of any object with mass, and these are known as gravitational waves. Gravitational waves are constantly passing unnoticed through Earth and they are caused by some of the most violent and energetic events in the Universe. These include colliding black holes, collapsing stellar cores, merging neutron stars or white dwarf stars, the wobble of neutron stars that are not perfect spheres and possibly even the remnants of gravitational radiation created at the birth of the Universe.

 

Press release from ESA Webb.

Webb sees carbon-rich dust grains at redshift, in the first billion years of cosmic time

For the first time, the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope has observed the chemical signature of carbon-rich dust grains at redshift ~ 7 [1], which is roughly equivalent to one billion years after the birth of the Universe [2]. Similar observational signatures have been observed in the much more recent Universe, attributed to complex, carbon-based molecules known as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). It is not thought likely, however, that PAHs would have developed within the first billion years of cosmic time. Therefore, this observation suggests the exciting possibility that Webb may have observed a different species of carbon-based molecule: possibly minuscule graphite- or diamond-like grains produced by the earliest stars or supernovae. This observation suggests exciting avenues of investigation into both the production of cosmic dust and the earliest stellar populations in our Universe, and was made possible by Webb’s unprecedented sensitivity.

Webb sees carbon-rich dust grains at redshift, in the first billion years of cosmic time
This image highlights the location of the galaxy JADES-GS-z6 in a portion of an area of the sky known as GOODS-South, which was observed as part of the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey, or JADES.
This galaxy, along with others in this region, were part of a Webb study by an international team of astronomers, who observed the chemical signature of carbon-rich dust grains at redshift ~7. This is roughly equivalent to one billion years after the birth of the Universe. Similar observational signatures have been observed in the much more recent Universe, attributed to complex, carbon-based molecules known as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). It is not thought likely, however, that PAHs would have developed within the first billion years of cosmic time. Therefore, this observation suggests the exciting possibility that Webb may have observed a different species of carbon-based molecule: possibly minuscule graphite- or diamond-like grains produced by the earliest stars or supernovae. This observation suggests exciting avenues of investigation into both the production of cosmic dust and the earliest stellar populations in our Universe, and was made possible by Webb’s unprecedented sensitivity.
The team’s research indicates that this particular galaxy showed significant dust obscuration and has undergone substantial metal enrichment relative to galaxies with similar mass at the same redshift. The team also believes the galaxy’s visible colour gradient may indicate a peculiar geometrical alignment of stars and dust.
In this image, blue, green, and red were assigned to Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) data at 0.9, 1.15, and 1.5 microns; 2.0, 2.77, and 3.55 microns; and 3.56, 4.1, and 4.44 microns (F090W, F115W, and F150W; F200W, F277W, and F335M; and F356W, F410M, and F444W), respectively.
The galaxy is shown zoomed in on a region measuring roughly 1×1 arcseconds, which is a measure of angular distance on the sky. One arcsecond is equal to 1/3600 of one degree of arc (the full Moon has an angular diameter of about 0.5 degrees). The actual size of an object that covers one arcsecond on the sky depends on its distance from the telescope.
Credit:
ESA/Webb, NASA, ESA, CSA, B. Robertson (UC Santa Cruz), B. Johnson (Center for Astrophysics, Harvard & Smithsonian), S. Tacchella (University of Cambridge, M. Rieke (Univ. of Arizona), D. Eisenstein (Center for Astrophysics, Harvard & Smithsonian), A. Pagan (STScI)

The seemingly empty spaces in our Universe are in reality often not empty at all, but occupied by clouds of gas and cosmic dust. This dust consists of grains of various sizes and compositions that are formed and ejected into space in a variety of ways, including by supernova events. This material is crucial to the evolution of the Universe, as dust clouds ultimately form the birthplaces for new stars and planets. However, it can also be a hindrance to astronomers: the dust absorbs stellar light at certain wavelengths, making some regions of space very challenging to observe. An upside, however, is that certain molecules will very consistently absorb or otherwise interact with specific wavelengths of light. This means that astronomers can acquire information about the cosmic dust’s composition by observing the wavelengths of light that it blocks. An international team of astronomers used this technique, combined with Webb’s extraordinary sensitivity, to detect the presence of carbon-rich dust grains only a billion years after the birth of the Universe.

Joris Witstok of the University of Cambridge, the lead author of this work, elaborates: “Carbon-rich dust grains can be particularly efficient at absorbing ultraviolet light with a wavelength around 217.5 nanometres, which for the first time we have directly observed in the spectra of very early galaxies.”

This prominent 217.5-nanometre feature has previously been observed in the much more recent and local Universe, both within our own Milky Way galaxy, and in galaxies up to redshift ~ 3 [1]. It has been attributed to two different types of carbon-based species: polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) or nano-sized graphitic grains. PAHs are complex molecules, and modern models predict that it should take several hundreds of millions of years before they form. It would be surprising, therefore, if the team had observed the chemical signature of a mixture of dust grains that include species that were unlikely to have formed yet. However, according to the science team, this result is the earliest and most distant direct signature for this particular type of carbon-rich dust grain.

The answer may lie in the details of what was observed. As already stated, the feature associated with the cosmic dust mixture of PAHs and tiny graphitic grains is at 217.5 nanometres. However, the feature observed by the team actually peaked at 226.3 nanometres. A nanometre is a millionth of a millimetre, and this discrepancy of less than ten nanometres could be accounted for by measurement error [3]. Equally, it could also indicate a difference in the composition of the early-Universe cosmic dust mixture that the team detected.

This slight shift in wavelength of where the absorption is strongest suggests we may be seeing a different mix of grains, for example graphite- or diamond-like grains,” adds Witstok. “This could also potentially be produced on short timescales by Wolf-Rayet stars or supernova ejecta.”

The detection of this feature in the early Universe is surprising, and allows astronomers to postulate about the mechanisms that could create such a mix of dust grains. This involves drawing on existing knowledge from observations and models. Witstok suggests diamond grains formed in supernova ejecta because models have previously suggested that nano-diamonds could be formed this way. Wolf-Rayet stars are suggested because they are exceptionally hot towards the end of their lives, and very hot stars tend to live fast and die young; giving enough time for generations of stars to have been born, lived, and died, to distribute carbon-rich grains into the surrounding cosmic dust in under a billion years. Models have also shown that carbon-rich grains can be produced by certain types of Wolf-Rayet stars, and just as importantly that those grains can survive the violent deaths of those stars. However, it is still a challenge to fully explain these results with the existing understanding of the early formation of cosmic dust. These results will therefore go on to inform the development of improved models and future observations.

Before Webb, the observations of multiple galaxies had to be combined in order to get signals strong enough to make deductions about the stellar populations in the galaxies, and to learn about how their light was affected by dust absorption. Importantly, astronomers were restricted to studying relatively old and mature galaxies that had had a long time to form stars as well as dust. This limited their ability to really pin down the key sources of cosmic dust. With the advent of Webb, astronomers are now able to make very detailed observations of the light from individual dwarf galaxies, seen in the first billion years of cosmic time. Webb finally permits the study of the origin of cosmic dust and its role in the crucial first stages of galaxy evolution.

“This discovery was made possible by the unparalleled sensitivity improvement in near-infrared spectroscopy provided by Webb, and specifically its Near-Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec),” noted team member Roberto Maiolino of the University of Cambridge and University College London. “The increase in sensitivity provided by Webb is equivalent, in the visibile, to instantaneously upgrading Galileo’s 37-millimetre telescope to the 8-metre Very Large Telescope (one of the most powerful modern optical telescopes).”

NIRSpec was built for the European Space Agency by a consortium of European companies led by Airbus Defence and Space (ADS) with NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Centre providing its detector and micro-shutter subsystems. The primary goal of NIRSpec is to enable large spectroscopic surveys of astronomical objects such as stars or distant galaxies. This is made possible by its powerful multi-object spectroscopy mode, which makes use of microshutters. This mode is capable of obtaining spectra of up to nearly 200 objects simultaneously, over a 3.6 × 3.4 arcminute field of view — the first time this capability has been provided from space. This mode makes for very efficient use of Webb’s valuable observing time.

The team is also planning further research into the data and this result.

“We are planning to work further with theorists who model dust production and growth in galaxies,” shares team member Irene Shivaei of the University of Arizona/Centro de Astrobiología (CAB). “This will shed light on the origin of dust and heavy elements in the early Universe.”

These observations were made as part of the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey, or JADES, which devoted about 32 days of telescope time to uncovering and characterising faint, distant galaxies. This programme has facilitated the discovery of hundreds of galaxies that existed when the Universe was less than 600 million years old, including some of the farthest galaxies known to date. The sheer number and maturity of these galaxies was far beyond predictions from observations made before Webb’s launch. This new result of early-Universe dust grains contributes to our growing and evolving understanding of the evolution of stellar populations and galaxies during the first billion years of cosmic time.

This discovery implies that infant galaxies in the early Universe develop much faster than we ever anticipated,” adds team member Renske Smit of the Liverpool John Moores University in the United Kingdom. “Webb shows us a complexity of the earliest birth-places of stars (and planets) that models are yet to explain.“

The results have been published today in Nature.

The infrared image shown here was taken as part of the JADES programme (the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey) and shows a portion of an area of the sky known as GOODS-South.
This region was the focus area of Webb study for an international team of astronomers, who observed the chemical signature of carbon-rich dust grains at redshift ~7. This is roughly equivalent to one billion years after the birth of the Universe. Similar observational signatures have been observed in the much more recent Universe, attributed to complex, carbon-based molecules known as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). It is not thought likely, however, that PAHs would have developed within the first billion years of cosmic time. Therefore, this observation suggests the exciting possibility that Webb may have observed a different species of carbon-based molecule: possibly minuscule graphite- or diamond-like grains produced by the earliest stars or supernovae. This observation suggests exciting avenues of investigation into both the production of cosmic dust and the earliest stellar populations in our Universe, and was made possible by Webb’s unprecedented sensitivity.
In this image, blue, green, and red were assigned to Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) data at 0.9, 1.15, and 1.5 microns; 2.0, 2.77, and 3.55 microns; and 3.56, 4.1, and 4.44 microns (F090W, F115W, and F150W; F200W, F277W, and F335M; and F356W, F410M, and F444W), respectively.
Credit:
ESA/Webb, NASA, ESA, CSA, B. Robertson (UC Santa Cruz), B. Johnson (Center for Astrophysics, Harvard & Smithsonian), S. Tacchella (University of Cambridge, M. Rieke (Univ. of Arizona), D. Eisenstein (Center for Astrophysics, Harvard & Smithsonian), A. Pagan (STScI)

Notes

[1] The Universe is expanding. The expansion is taking place at the fundamental spacetime level, which means that light travelling through the Universe is ‘stretched’ as the Universe expands. The earlier in the Universe the light originated, the more it will have been stretched by now. Practically speaking, this stretching of light means its wavelength becomes longer. This effect is known as cosmological redshift, because the colour red has the longest wavelength of all light visible to human eyes. Because of this, cosmological time is often not measured in years, but is indicated by the redshift of the observed light. The very local Universe — where the light we observe was emitted recently and has not been notably redshifted — has a low redshift. Conversely, redshift 7 corresponds to light that was emitted about 13 billion years ago, in the very early Universe.

[2] Astronomy fundamentally involves the study of light, and light travels at a finite speed (roughly 300 million kilometres per second). Objects can only be observed by humans once light from them has reached Earth. Whilst in some ways providing a limitation, this also provides a direct opportunity to study the early as well as the present Universe. Studying light from the early Universe necessarily entails the observation of regions very distant from Earth from which it takes a huge amount of time for light to travel to us. Thus, probing these early cosmological times (or high redshifts) requires very sensitive telescopes.

[3] All scientific measurements — including those from observations and those predicted by models — will have an associated error. This is because there will always be sources of uncertainty. If a measurement falls within the bounds of the expected error, it means that it could still be accurate: in this context, that means the 226.3 nanometre feature could still account for the same mix of cosmic dust as that represented by the 217.5 nanometre feature.

 

Press release from ESA Webb