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Brief News

In search for the furthest galaxies


teaserAn international research team is performing a program in search for the furthest galaxies in the universe. But distant objects are also very faint. For this reason, the search relies upon one of the strangest implications of general relativity: the amplification of light coming from remote bodies due to the gravitational effects of closer ones, the gravitational lensing effect.


The DAFT/FADA Survey team (leaded by Christophe Adami and with participation of the IAA) has selected almost one hundred very massive galaxy clusters located at moderate distances, with the hope that some of them may be acting as gravitational lenses amplifying the images of galaxies far, far away. Then they study the surroundings of those clusters, by means of many telescopes all around the world, identifying candidates that may count among the furthest galaxies known to date. To this end it is necessary to observe very faint targets that have to be looked at not only in visible light, but also in the infrared. This is due to the cosmological redshift effect, that makes distant galaxies to appear brighter when observed in this “invisible” light, than in the bands accessible to the human eye.


fig small

The surroundings of galaxy cluster GHO 1322+3027 observed with different telescopes and at several spectral bands. The small red circles mark three candidates to be extremely distant galaxies. The infrared image taken at Calar Alto is bottom right.

Recent data have led to several promising candidates, thanks to observations performed at Calar Alto with the 3.5 m Zeiss reflecting telescope and the infrared camera Omega 2000. The results indicate that some targets may be placed really far away (redshift larger tan 6, what means distances larger than ten billion light-years). These results still require additional studies to be fully confirmed, but this on-going research offers an excellent example of what can be reached by means of international cooperation and using in a coordinate way data coming from different observatories.


 

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Centro Astronómico Hispano en Andalucía
Observatorio de Calar Alto
Sierra de los Filabres
04550 Gérgal (Almería, SPAIN)

+34-950-632500

+34-950-632504

info@caha.es

Carl Sagan

Somos polvo de estrellas, buscando en el firmamento las respuestas que el universo tiene guardadas para nosotros. La astronomía es el arte de desvelar los secretos del cosmos, y cada noche, al observar el cielo, nos acercamos un poco más a nuestro lugar en el infinito.

Carl Sagan
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  • News
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    • Staff
      • Staff List
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    • CAHA Departments
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      • Maintenance
      • Electronics
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      • Science Advisory Committee
      • Time Allocation Committee
    • Transparency Portal
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      • Privacy Policy
      • Cookies Policy
      • Surveillance Policy
      • Security policy
  • Observing
    • Telescopes & Instruments
    • DDT
    • Data Management Plan
    • Call for proposals
    • Information for Astronomers
    • Utilities & Forms
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    • Science Advisory Committee
    • Instrumental projects
      • CARMENES+
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      • CARMENES Legacy+
      • CAVITY
      • KOBE
    • Publications
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