| Don Savage NASA Headquarters Washington, DC (Phone: 202-358-1547) Bill Steigerwald Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD (phone: 301-286-5017) Ray Villard Space Telescope Science Institute Baltimore, MD (Phone: 410-338-4514) |
August 27, 1998 |
RELEASE: 98-153
FAR-FLUNG GALAXY CLUSTERS MAY REVEAL FATE OF UNIVERSE
A survey of galaxy clusters by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has found what could be some
of the most distant clusters ever seen. If the distances and masses of the clusters are
confirmed by ground-based telescopes, the survey may hold clues to how galaxies quickly
formed into massive large-scale structures after the Big Bang, and what that may mean for
the eventual fate of the universe.
According to theoretical models, if the clusters turn out to be massive and very distant,
it could imply that the cosmos does not contain enough matter for gravity to stop the
expansion of the universe. These models predict that such a low-density universe would
have built most of its galaxy clusters long ago.
About 10 to 20 of the farthest clusters in the Hubble survey may be over seven billion
light years away, which means that the clusters, and their populations of tens or perhaps
hundreds of galaxies each, were fully assembled early in the history of the universe.
Present distance estimates are based on the colors of the galaxies in each cluster. The
redder the overall cluster appears, the more distant it is, an assumption based on the
apparent reddening of light -- known as red shift -- as stars and galaxies move away from
us at high speeds. The distances can be more accurately measured using a spectrograph
attached to a ground-based telescope.
The Hubble survey contains 92 new clusters uncovered during a six-year sky survey known as
the Medium Deep Survey,
led by a team of astronomers now at Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA.
The project has been led by Professor Richard Griffiths and senior scientist Dr. Kavan
Ratnatunga. The catalog samples an area of the sky that is small, but scattered over 300
random directions.
The clusters were found using an automated procedure developed by the Carnegie Mellon
team. They first identified large elliptical galaxies in random fields taken by Hubble.
Next, an automated procedure was used to search statistically for an over-abundance
of galaxies around the large elliptical galaxies. The assumption is that the excess
galaxies all belong to the same cluster. This procedure helped to discriminate clusters
against the field galaxy population which is smoothly distributed across the sky.
Major new telescopes must be used to study these clusters to measure their distances.
The whole HST catalog of galaxies can be searched on the web at: http://astro.phys.cmu.edu/mds/
The Hubble observations will be published in the Astronomical Journal. The research team
members are: E. J. Ostrander; K. U. Ratnatunga; and R. E. Griffiths, Department of
Physics, Carnegie Mellon University.
The Space Telescope Science Institute is operated by the Association of Universities for
Research in Astronomy, Inc. (AURA) for NASA, under contract with the Goddard Space Flight
Center, Greenbelt, MD. The Hubble Space Telescope is
a project of international cooperation between NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA).
- end -
EDITOR'S NOTE: Images from Hubble's Medium Deep Field catalog are available on the
Internet at:
http://oposite.stsci.edu/latest
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