GSTDTAP

浏览/检索结果: 共4条,第1-4条 帮助

已选(0)清除 条数/页:   排序方式:
Spectroscopic confirmation of a mature galaxy cluster at a redshift of 2 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 577 (7788) : 39-+
作者:  Willis, J. P.;  Canning, R. E. A.;  Noordeh, E. S.;  Allen, S. W.;  King, A. L.;  Mantz, A.;  Morris, R. G.;  Stanford, S. A.;  Brammer, G.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:12/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Galaxy clusters are the most massive virialized structures in the Universe and are formed through the gravitational accretion of matter over cosmic time(1). The discovery(2) of an evolved galaxy cluster at redshift z = 2, corresponding to a look-back time of 10.4 billion years, provides an opportunity to study its properties. The galaxy cluster XLSSC 122 was originally detected as a faint, extended X-ray source in the XMM Large Scale Structure survey and was revealed to be coincident with a compact over-density of galaxies(2) with photometric redshifts of 1.9 +/- 0.2. Subsequent observations3 at millimetre wavelengths detected a Sunyaev-Zel'  dovich decrement along the line of sight to XLSSC 122, thus confirming the existence of hot intracluster gas, while deep imaging spectroscopy from the European Space Agency'  s X-ray Multi-Mirror Mission (XMM-Newton) revealed(4) an extended, X-ray-bright gaseous atmosphere with a virial temperature of 60 million Kelvin, enriched with metals to the same extent as are local clusters. Here we report optical spectroscopic observations of XLSSC 122 and identify 37 member galaxies at a mean redshift of 1.98, corresponding to a look-back time of 10.4 billion years. We use photometry to determine a mean, dust-free stellar age of 2.98 billion years, indicating that star formation commenced in these galaxies at a mean redshift of 12, when the Universe was only 370 million years old. The full range of inferred formation redshifts, including the effects of dust, covers the interval from 7 to 13. These observations confirm that XLSSC 122 is a remarkably mature galaxy cluster with both evolved stellar populations in the member galaxies and a hot, metal-rich gas composing the intracluster medium.


  
Do Existing Multiobjective Evolutionary Algorithms Use a Sufficient Number of Operators? An Empirical Investigation for Water Distribution Design Problems 期刊论文
WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 2020, 56 (5)
作者:  Wang, Peng;  Zecchin, Aaron C.;  Maier, Holger R.;  Zheng, Feifei;  Newman, Jeffrey P.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:12/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/02
multiobjective evolutionary algorithms  operators  water distribution system design optimization  Borg  GALAXY  NSGA-II  
A cold, massive, rotating disk galaxy 1.5 billion years after the Big Bang 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 581 (7808) : 269-+
作者:  Poplawski, Gunnar H. D.;  Kawaguchi, Riki;  Van Niekerk, Erna;  Lu, Paul;  Mehta, Neil;  Canete, Philip;  Lie, Richard;  Dragatsis, Ioannis;  Meves, Jessica M.;  Zheng, Binhai;  Coppola, Giovanni;  Tuszynski, Mark H.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:55/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Massive disk galaxies like the Milky Way are expected to form at late times in traditional models of galaxy formation(1,2), but recent numerical simulations suggest that such galaxies could form as early as a billion years after the Big Bang through the accretion of cold material and mergers(3,4). Observationally, it has been difficult to identify disk galaxies in emission at high redshift(5,6) in order to discern between competing models of galaxy formation. Here we report imaging, with a resolution of about 1.3 kiloparsecs, of the 158-micrometre emission line from singly ionized carbon, the far-infrared dust continuum and the near-ultraviolet continuum emission from a galaxy at a redshift of 4.2603, identified by detecting its absorption of quasar light. These observations show that the emission arises from gas inside a cold, dusty, rotating disk with a rotational velocity of about 272 kilometres per second. The detection of emission from carbon monoxide in the galaxy yields a molecular mass that is consistent with the estimate from the ionized carbon emission of about 72 billion solar masses. The existence of such a massive, rotationally supported, cold disk galaxy when the Universe was only 1.5 billion years old favours formation through either cold-mode accretion or mergers, although its large rotational velocity and large content of cold gas remain challenging to reproduce with most numerical simulations(7,8).


A massive rotating disk galaxy was formed a mere 1.5 billion years after the Big Bang, a surprisingly short time after the origin of the Universe.


  
An early start for galactic disks 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 581 (7808) : 267-268
作者:  DeWeerdt, Sarah;  Zastrow, Mark;  Conroy, Gemma
收藏  |  浏览/下载:0/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

A powerful radio telescope has peered back through time to observe a galaxy that contained a cold, rotating disk of gas not long after the Big Bang - fuelling the debate about when and how disks first formed in galaxies.


A cold rotating gas disk from 12.5 billion years ago.