the first ionized bubbles in the cosmic dawn · history. • we have found an ionized bubble,...

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The First Ionized Bubbles in the Cosmic Dawn James Rhoads & Sangeeta Malhotra NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and Vithal S. Tilvi Arizona State University [email protected] (mobile: 480-278-0192); [email protected]; [email protected]

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Page 1: The First Ionized Bubbles in the Cosmic Dawn · history. • We have found an ionized bubble, traced by the earliest known galaxy group (EGS77), when the universe was 5% of its current

The First Ionized Bubblesin the Cosmic Dawn

James Rhoads & Sangeeta MalhotraNASA Goddard Space Flight Center

and Vithal S. TilviArizona State University

[email protected] (mobile: 480-278-0192); [email protected]; [email protected]

Page 2: The First Ionized Bubbles in the Cosmic Dawn · history. • We have found an ionized bubble, traced by the earliest known galaxy group (EGS77), when the universe was 5% of its current

A Sketch of Cosmic History

Big Bang Now13.8 billion years ago

Cosmic microwave background Cosmic

Dawn

Dark Ages

Page 3: The First Ionized Bubbles in the Cosmic Dawn · history. • We have found an ionized bubble, traced by the earliest known galaxy group (EGS77), when the universe was 5% of its current

Growth of Ionized Bubbles

Simulation by M. Alvarez, R. Kaehler, and T. Abel

Page 4: The First Ionized Bubbles in the Cosmic Dawn · history. • We have found an ionized bubble, traced by the earliest known galaxy group (EGS77), when the universe was 5% of its current

Lyman Alpha

• A particular wavelength of light, produced by young galaxies.

• Before reionization – it is scattered, like headlights in fog.

• After reionization– we can see it clearly now.

By looking for Lyman alpha from galaxies we can determine if their surroundings are neutral or ionized..

Page 5: The First Ionized Bubbles in the Cosmic Dawn · history. • We have found an ionized bubble, traced by the earliest known galaxy group (EGS77), when the universe was 5% of its current

The Cosmic DAWN SurveyWe undertook sensitive infrared imaging from the KittPeak National Observatory’s 4m Mayall Telescope + NEWFIRM camera.

We looked for Lyman alpha light from galaxies in the epoch of cosmic dawn.

We took spectra of DAWN survey galaxies with the Keck telescope on Maunakea, Hawai`i.

Page 6: The First Ionized Bubbles in the Cosmic Dawn · history. • We have found an ionized bubble, traced by the earliest known galaxy group (EGS77), when the universe was 5% of its current

The Group EGS77 in the Cosmic DAWN Survey

Page 7: The First Ionized Bubbles in the Cosmic Dawn · history. • We have found an ionized bubble, traced by the earliest known galaxy group (EGS77), when the universe was 5% of its current

Galaxy Group EGS77Lyman alpha light - bright

Redder starlight –detected but faint

Bluer light –galaxies not detected

Page 8: The First Ionized Bubbles in the Cosmic Dawn · history. • We have found an ionized bubble, traced by the earliest known galaxy group (EGS77), when the universe was 5% of its current

Galaxy Group EGS77 in Cosmic History

Page 9: The First Ionized Bubbles in the Cosmic Dawn · history. • We have found an ionized bubble, traced by the earliest known galaxy group (EGS77), when the universe was 5% of its current

EGS 77 bubbles in contxt

Page 10: The First Ionized Bubbles in the Cosmic Dawn · history. • We have found an ionized bubble, traced by the earliest known galaxy group (EGS77), when the universe was 5% of its current

Summary

• Reionization was the last time that anything interesting happened to a typical atom, and we want to understand its history.

• We have found an ionized bubble, traced by the earliest known galaxy group (EGS77), when the universe was 5% of its current age.

• This sheds new light on Cosmic Dawn.• There is a bright future for studying EGS77 with JWST, and

finding more like it with [email protected] (mobile: 480-278-0192); [email protected]; [email protected]

Page 11: The First Ionized Bubbles in the Cosmic Dawn · history. • We have found an ionized bubble, traced by the earliest known galaxy group (EGS77), when the universe was 5% of its current

The Cosmic DAWN Survey Team

These results are described in more detail in a manuscript submitted to The Astrophysical Journal Letters and led by V. Tilvi.

The DAWN team consists ofJames Rhoads, Sangeeta Malhotra, Vithal S. Tilvi, Alicia Coughlin, Ronald Probst, Sylvain Veilleux, Steven L. Finkelstein, Bahram Mobasher, Pascale Hibon, Tianxing Jiang, Bhavin Joshi, John Pharo, Rob Swaters, Junxian Wang, Huan Yang, Johannes Zabl, and Zhenya Zheng.