The colors of quasars reveal a dusty universe (2/27/2009)
 | | Spiral galaxies seen edge-on often show dark lanes of interstellar dust blocking light from the galaxy's stars, as in this image of the galaxy NGC 4565 from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The dust is formed in the outer regions of dying stars, and it drifts off to mix with interstellar gas. The new analysis of quasar colors shows that galaxies also expel dust to distances of several hundred thousand light years, ten times farther than the visible edge of the galaxy seen in this image. The thin haze of intergalactic dust dims and reddens the light from background quasars. - The Sloan Digital Sky Survey |
The vast expanses of intergalactic space appear to be filled with a
haze of tiny, smoke-like "dust" particles that dim the light from
distant objects and subtly change their colors, according to a team of
astronomers from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-II).
"Galaxies contain lots of dust, most of it formed in the outer regions
of dying stars," said team leader Brice Menard of the Canadian
Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics. "The surprise is that we are seeing
dust hundreds of thousands of light-years outside of the galaxies, in
intergalactic space."
The new findings are reported in a paper titled "Measuring the
galaxy-mass and galaxy-dust correlations through magnification and
reddening," submitted to the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal
Astronomical Society, and posted today on the web site arXiv.org.
To discover this intergalactic dust, the team analyzed the colors of
distant quasars whose light passes in the vicinity of foreground
galaxies on its way to the Earth.
Dust grains block blue light more effectively than red light,
explained astronomer Ryan Scranton of the University of California,
Davis, another member of the discovery team. "We see this when the sun
sets: light rays pass through a thicker layer of the atmosphere,
absorbing more and more blue light, causing the sun to appear
reddened."
"We find similar reddening of quasars from intergalactic dust, and this
reddening extends up to ten times beyond the apparent edges of
the galaxies themselves," said Scranton.
The team analyzed the colors of about 100,000 distant quasars located
behind 20 million galaxies, using images from SDSS-II. "Putting together
and analyzing this huge dataset required cutting-edge ideas from computer
science and statistics," said team member Gordon Richards of Drexel
University. "Averaging over so many objects allowed us to measure an effect that is much too small to see in any individual quasar."
Supernova explosions and "winds" from massive stars drive gas out of
some galaxies, Menard explained, and this gas may carry dust with it.
Alternatively, the dust may be pushed directly by starlight. "Our findings now provide a reference point for theoretical studies," said Menard.
Intergalactic dust could also affect planned cosmological
experiments that use supernovae to investigate the nature of
"dark energy," a mysterious cosmic component responsible for
the acceleration of the expansion of the universe.
"Just like household dust, cosmic dust can be a nuisance,"
said Scranton. "Our results imply that most distant supernovae are
seen through a bit of haze, which may affect estimates of their distances."
Intergalactic dust doesn't remove the need for dark energy to explain
current supernova data, Menard explained, but it may complicate the
interpretation of future high-precision distance measurements.
"These experiments are very ambitious in their goals," said Menard, "and
subtle effects matter."
Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
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