Chandra finds
most distant X-ray cluster
The most distant
X-ray cluster of galaxies yet has been found by astronomers using NASA's
Chandra X-ray Observatory. Approximately 10 billion light-years from
Earth, the cluster 3C294 is 40 percent farther than the next most distant
X-ray galaxy cluster. The existence of such a distant galaxy cluster
is important for understanding how the universe evolved.
"Distant objects
like 3C294 provide snapshots to how these galaxy clusters looked billions
of years ago," said Andrew Fabian of the Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge,
England and lead author of the paper accepted for publication in the
Monthly Notices of Britain's Royal Astronomical Society. "These latest
results help us better understand what the Universe was like when it
was only 20 percent of its current age."
Chandra's image
reveals an hourglass-shaped region of X-ray emission centered on the
previously known central radio source. This X-ray emission extends outward
from the central galaxy for at least 300,000 light years and shows that
the known radio source is in the central galaxy of a massive cluster.
Scientists have
long suspected that distant radio-emitting galaxies like 3C294 are part
of larger groups of galaxies known as "clusters." However, radio data
provides astronomers with only a partial picture of these distant objects.
Confirmation of the
existence of clusters at great distances - and, hence, at early stages
of the Universe - requires information from other wavelengths. Optical
observations can be used to pinpoint individual galaxies, but X-ray
data are needed to detect the hot gas that fills the space within the
cluster.
"Galaxy clusters
are the largest gravitationally bound structures in the Universe," said
Fabian. "We do not expect to find many massive objects, such as the
3C294 cluster, in early times because structure is thought to grow from
small scales to large scales."
The vast clouds
of hot gas that envelope galaxies in clusters are thought to be heated
by collapse toward the center of the cluster. Until Chandra, X-ray telescopes
have not had the needed sensitivity to identify and measure hot gas
clouds in distant clusters.
Carolin Crawford,
Stefano Ettori and Jeremy Sanders of the Institute of Astronomy were
also members of the team that observed 3C294 for 5.4 hours on October
29, 2000 with the Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer (ACIS).
The ACIS X-ray
camera was developed for NASA by Pennsylvania State University and Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville,
Ala., manages the Chandra program for the Office of Space Science in
Washington, DC. The Smithsonian's Chandra X-ray Center controls science
and flight operations from Cambridge, Mass.
Images associated
with the release are available at:
http://chandra.harvard.edu/
and
http://chandra.nasa.gov/