Follow me!

Be my friend on Facebook!
Follow me on Twitter!

Login Form






Lost Password?
No account yet? Register

Syndicate

Help Feed My Son

Donate

Home
Farthest Galaxy Found, Perhaps
Written by Clara Moskowitz of Space.com   
Friday, 15 February 2008
Astronomers have glimpsed what may be the farthest galaxy we've ever seen, providing a picture of a baby galaxy born soon after the beginning of the universe.

Images taken with the Hubble Space Telescope have revealed the galaxy at almost 13 billion light-years away, making it the strongest candidate for the most distant galaxy ever seen, said European Southern Observatory astronomer Piero Rosati, who helped make the discovery.

An artist's impression of an embryonic galaxy brimming with star birth in the early universe.
Since the galaxy is so far away, its light took ages to reach us, so what we see now is a snapshot of how this galaxy looked 13 billion years ago. At that point in time, the galaxy would have been newly formed, so the new observations provide a baby picture.

"We certainly were surprised to find such a bright young galaxy 13 billion years in the past," said astronomer Garth Illingworth of the University of California, Santa Cruz, a member of the research team. "This is the most detailed look to date at an object so far back in time."

The young galaxy, called A1689-zD1, was born about 700 million years after the Big Bang that scientists think created the universe. For most of its early life, the universe languished in "dark ages" when matter in the expanding universe cooled and formed clouds of hydrogen. Eventually matter began to clump into stars and galaxies that radiated light, heating up the universe and clearing the fog.

Scientists think this newly discovered galaxy may have been one of the first to form and help end the dark ages.

"This galaxy presumably is one of the many galaxies that helped end the dark ages," said astronomer Larry Bradley of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, leader of the research team. "Astronomers are fairly certain that high-energy objects such as quasars did not provide enough energy to end the dark ages of the universe. But many young star-forming galaxies may have produced enough energy to end it."

The discovery was made possible by a natural magnifying glass — the galaxy cluster Abell 1689, which lies between us and the distant galaxy. Abell 1689's gravity is so strong it bends light that passes near it, acting like a giant zoom lens that magnifies what we see.

"This galaxy lies near the region where the galaxy cluster produces the highest magnification," Rosati said, "which was essential to bring this galaxy within reach of Hubble and Spitzer."
 
Hello to all my old Cablevision friends. :)
Written by Angel   
Wednesday, 30 January 2008
HI!!! Just wanted to post a simple hello for all my old friends from Cablevision. Just so you guys know you have the right site. If you're coming here for the first time, you'll see exactly how boring I could be. So, ENJOY IT! :D Hello to all my old school CVC friends.
 
Please email me from the contact page. I'd love to hear from you guys.
 
I'd like to say hi to:
 
Norma P. - Hi my love. :) Glad you found me. 
Elizabeth C. - Yep.. this is the right site.. Sad ain't it. :/
Cecilia C. - Shut up. :P Get in the game. lol.
 
I look forward to hearing from you guys. :) 
Last Updated ( Thursday, 31 January 2008 )
 
The purging of the inboxes...
Written by Angel   
Saturday, 26 January 2008
 Here's the problem with owning several domains: You end up with hundreds of email addresses just for yourself. : / Not to mention the many dead addresses that used to belong to people I was associated with, who no longer require an email address provided by my domains. (Get your own email address... Gravy train is over. Wanna complain about it? Contact me from here.)
 
So, I'll be consolidating my addresses over the coming weeks. My goal is to only use one address per domain for contacts. If you have any email addresses for me, you may want to make sure they still work after next week or so. I'll also be deleting old accounts that no longer have users.
 
The old "User-less" accounts are just being deleted. Email addresses to those accounts will now be sent to a black hole. A few of my old email addresses will be redirected to other working email addresses. And some will also black hole into oblivion. You'll just have to try to contact me to make sure you still have the right email address.
 
As always, the contact page here on the site will always be delivered directly to my inbox. ;)
Last Updated ( Sunday, 27 January 2008 )
 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next > End >>

Results 9 - 12 of 21

Hello, you either have JavaScript turned off or an old version of Macromedia's Flash Player. Get the latest flash player.