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University of California-Santa Cruz

Contact:
Shawna Williams (831) 459-2495, sewillia@ucsc.edu
Tim Stephens (831) 459-2495, stephens@ucsc.edu

EMBARGOED: Not for release until 2 p.m. Eastern Time on Wednesday, April 30

Messages from the early universe shed light on how elements form

SANTA CRUZ, CA -- New information from a distant corner of the universe 
may lead to a fuller understanding of how the elements of the periodic 
table -- which make up all the familiar matter in the universe -- come 
to be. A team of astronomers has used light from a powerful quasar to 
analyze the composition of a young galaxy in unprecedented detail, 
measuring elements never before detected in such a far-off galaxy.

"I never thought we'd find one where we could measure boron, tin, and 
lead," said Jason X. Prochaska, the University of California, Santa 
Cruz, astronomer who led the project. "This opens up a whole new area of 
research."

The technique only works for very distant galaxies that happen to be in 
the line of sight between Earth and a quasar, said Prochaska, an 
assistant professor of astronomy and astrophysics.

"The quasar provides a little window where we can do this observation," 
he said.

Prochaska and his collaborators, J. Christopher Howk and Arthur M. Wolfe 
of UC San Diego, report in the May 1 issue of the journal Nature that 
galaxies in this window provide valuable clues about nucleosynthesis, 
the process by which elements form.

By determining the relative amounts of elements in different cosmic 
objects, astronomers learn about how various astrophysical processes 
stock the periodic table. Only the lightest elements -- hydrogen, 
helium, and lithium -- are thought to have formed in the first moments 
after the Big Bang. Other elements come together inside stars, where 
extreme heat and density encourage lighter elements to fuse together.

Stars produce different elements at different stages of their life 
cycles. When stars burst into supernovae, the explosions forge still 
more elements. Supernovae spew out newly formed elements as interstellar 
gas, which eventually condenses into new stars and planets. Other 
processes, such as the action of cosmic rays, account for further 
nucleosynthesis.

Most information on nucleosynthesis to date has come from studies of 
stars in our home galaxy, the Milky Way, and a handful of other nearby 
galaxies. Each element absorbs and gives off light at a certain 
wavelength. By analyzing the intensity of light coming from stars at 
specific wavelengths, astronomers can determine the relative amounts of 
the elements they contain. In this traditional approach, the star both 
emits and absorbs the light that astronomers analyze.

An alternative technique uses the absorption of light by interstellar 
gas to measure elemental abundances in the gas that fills the Milky Way 
and other galaxies. For example, analyzing the light from a bright star 
in the Milky Way reveals absorption signatures that tell astronomers 
about the composition of the gas between the star and the Earth.

This technique can be used on other galaxies by identifying a distant 
quasar that lies behind the galaxy. Quasars are extremely bright objects 
astronomers think are related to massive black holes. The technique has 
been applied to the Milky Way and its nearest neighbors, but the 
observations are difficult because the majority of the absorption 
signatures lie at ultraviolet wavelengths. Earth's atmosphere filters 
out ultraviolet light, so the observations require expensive space-based 
telescopes.

Ironically, this technique is more easily carried out on very distant 
galaxies. That's because the expansion of the universe causes galaxies 
to move further apart so fast that the light they emit is shifted toward 
longer wavelengths. Galaxies that are extremely far away -- say, 10 
billion light-years -- are moving at such a pace that the absorption 
signatures from their elements are shifted out of the ultraviolet and 
into the visible range. By analyzing the signature of an intervening 
galaxy on light from a distant quasar, astronomers gain vital 
information on galaxies that are generally too faint to observe directly.

In the Nature paper, Prochaska and his coauthors describe a young galaxy 
in which they were able to study the signatures of many different 
elements. The galaxy is so far away that the light from it has taken 
billions of years to reach Earth, thereby giving the astronomers a 
glimpse back in time.

Prochaska's group first found the galaxy by identifying a characteristic 
dip in the quasar signal caused by hydrogen gas in the galaxy. The 
researchers then looked for the signatures caused by other elements. By 
measuring the dips in light intensities at the corresponding 
wavelengths, they determined the relative amounts of 25 different 
elements in the galaxy. Previous observations of such distant galaxies 
have yielded information on only a handful of elements.

"Many of the additional elements give us new information on how stars 
are forming, how elements form, and the age of the galaxy," Prochaska 
said. "Each of those is a key area of astrophysics, so to be able to do 
all three is particularly exciting."

Scientists constantly look for new astronomical data to confirm or 
refine their models for how nucleosynthesis occurs. In this galaxy, the 
ratios of elements to each other is similar to that in our own galaxy, 
which Prochaska said was comforting because "it appears there is nothing 
too weird going on here." The differences between the two galaxies are 
also instructive, putting the age of the young galaxy at about one to 
two billion years, compared with the 10-billion-year-old Milky Way.

The researchers hope to study many more galaxies in the same way. They 
have already found another promising galaxy along the same sight line as 
the one described in the paper.

"What is exciting is that this discovery suggests we can repeat the 
analysis for 100 other galaxies," Prochaska said. "That's 100 different 
galaxies walking down unique paths for the formation of the elements."

The researchers made their observations at the W. M. Keck Observatory on 
Mauna Kea, Hawaii. The initial observations were made with the 
Echellette Spectrograph Imager on the Keck II Telescope, and follow-up 
observations with the High Resolution Echelle Spectrograph (HIRES) on 
the Keck I Telescope.

Note to reporters: You may contact Prochaska at (831) 459-2135 or 
xavier@ucolick.org. He will be observing at the W. M. Keck Observatory 
from April 26 to May 2 and can be reached there at (808) 885-7887.


