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2004 News Releases
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The two rows of this image show two patches of sky, both contained within the field known as the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey. The Chandra column on the left shows high-energy emissions believed to trace the presence of supermassive black holes. The Hubble column in the middle, using visible light, show no signs of these galaxies. The Spitzer column on the right shows the same region in infrared.
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Spitzer Leads NASA's Great Observatories to Uncover Black Holes, Other Hidden Objects
June 1, 2004
Astronomers unveiled the deepest images from NASA's new Spitzer
Space Telescope today and announced the detection of distant objects
-- including several supermassive black holes -- that are nearly
invisible in even the deepest images from telescopes operating at
other wavelengths.
Dr. Mark Dickinson, of the National Optical Astronomy Observatory,
Tucson, Ariz., principal investigator for the new observations,
said, "With these ultra-deep Spitzer images, we are easily seeing
objects throughout time and space, where the most distant known
galaxies lie. Moreover, we see some objects that are completely
invisible, but whose existence was hinted at by previous
observations from the Chandra and Hubble Observatories."
Seven of the objects detected by Spitzer may be part of the long-
sought population of "missing" supermassive black holes that powered
the bright cores of the earliest active galaxies. The discovery
completes a full accounting of all the X-ray sources seen in one of
the deepest surveys of the universe ever taken.
This detective story required the combined power of NASA's three
Great Observatories -- the Hubble Space Telescope, Chandra X-ray
Observatory and Spitzer Space Telescope. Each observatory studies
different wavelengths, from high-energy X-rays with Chandra, through
visible light with Hubble, and into the infrared with Spitzer.
Together, these telescopes yield far more information than any
single instrument.
All three telescopes looked as far as 13 billion light-years away,
toward a small patch of the southern sky containing more than 10,000
galaxies, in a coordinated project called the Great Observatories
Origins Deep Survey (GOODS). Chandra images detected more than 200
X-ray sources believed to be supermassive black holes in the centers
of young galaxies. Extremely hot interstellar gases falling into the
black holes produce the X-rays.
Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys revealed optical galaxies
around almost all the X-ray black holes. However, seven mysterious X-
ray sources remained for which there was no optical galaxy. Dr.
Anton Koekemoer of the Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore,
Md., discovered these sources and has three intriguing possibilities
for their origin: "The galaxies around these black holes may be
completely hidden by thick clouds of dust absorbing all their light,
or may contain very old, red stars. Or some could be the most
distant black holes ever observed -- perhaps as far as 13 billion
light-years." If so, all their optical light would be shifted to
very long infrared wavelengths by expansion of the universe.
Scientists eagerly awaited the Spitzer images to solve this puzzle.
Because Spitzer observes at infrared wavelengths up to 100 times
longer than those probed by Hubble, Spitzer might be able to see the
otherwise invisible objects. Indeed, the very first Spitzer images
of these objects, obtained earlier this year, immediately revealed
the telltale infrared glow from the host galaxies around all the
missing X-ray black holes.
Three of Koekemoer's galaxies are extremely "red," or bright, in
infrared. The Spitzer data, together with new images at shorter
infrared wavelengths from the Very Large Telescope at the European
Southern Observatory, indicate that the galaxies around these black
holes could be heavily obscured by dust, and perhaps more distant
than other known dust-obscured galaxies. Some of the other objects,
however, have quite different colors, and are even more intriguing.
"Their colors may be consistent with objects more distant than any
now known," said Dickinson, who cautioned that additional Spitzer
observations later this year will help confirm what kind of objects
these might be.
Old Galaxies Shine in Infrared: In another study using the same
Spitzer data, Dr. Haojing Yan of the California Institute of
Technology, Pasadena, Calif., studied 17 unusual galaxies near the
Hubble Ultra Deep Field. This small patch of sky within the GOODS
area was recently the target for the deepest optical images ever
taken with Hubble's Advanced Camera. The Deep Field optical images,
released in March 2004, reach more than five times fainter than the
GOODS Hubble data. But even with that phenomenal sensitivity, two
of the 17 Spitzer-selected objects remain completely invisible in
optical light, while the others are only faintly detected. Yan finds
that these galaxies get steadily brighter at longer wavelengths, and
seem to be more distant cousins of the so-called "Extremely Red
Objects," known from previous deep surveys. Most are distant
galaxies that are red because they are either old or dusty. These
new Spitzer-identified objects, however, appear to lie farther away
to a time when the universe was only two billion years old.
"These objects could be the remnants of the first stars -- the very
first galaxies formed in the earliest stages of the universe," said
Yan. Most galaxies that we see today formed their stars gradually
over a long period of time. But these 17 objects seem to be "old
before their time," perhaps almost as old as the universe itself at
that early epoch. "If we indeed are seeing the direct, 'pure'
descendants of the first stars, this would make a thrilling story,"
says Yan. Further Spitzer observations at longer wavelengths,
planned for later this year, should help decide whether these
objects are red because they are old, or because they are young and
actively forming stars enveloped in dust.
Black Holes In Hiding: Using Hubble and Chandra data, Dr. Meg Urry,
a GOODS astronomer at Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and her
team suggest that most accreting black holes are hidden at visible
wavelengths, even in the early universe. Few such hidden black holes
had previously been found at such large distances, despite
theoretical arguments for their existence. They were missed because
their visible radiation is so dim they look like faint, ordinary
galaxies. "With the new Spitzer data these very luminous, distant
objects are easily visible," said Urry. "The great sensitivity of
the new Spitzer infrared cameras, combined with the superb spatial
resolution of Chandra, means that finding all of the black holes
that are powered by infalling gas is now possible."
Urry's team is using data from the three space observatories to take
a census of the supermassive black holes that formed two to five
billion years after the big bang. Most of these active galactic
nuclei are hidden by dust, which absorbs visible and some X-ray
light but emits strongly at infrared wavelengths. "The Spitzer GOODS
observations verify that large numbers perhaps three-quarters of
the obscured active galactic nuclei were indeed present in the early
universe. The longer-wavelength Spitzer data still to come will
reveal even more shrouded active galactic nuclei," said Urry,
"including some, missed by X-ray observations, which look like
ultraluminous infrared galaxies."
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., manages the
Spitzer Space Telescope, with science operations conducted at
Caltech. The Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Md. is
operated by the Association of Universities for Research in
Astronomy, Inc. for NASA, under contract with the Goddard Space
Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. The Hubble Space Telescope is a
project of international cooperation between NASA and the European
Space Agency. NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.,
manages the Chandra program for NASA's Office of Space Science,
Washington. Northrop Grumman of Redondo Beach, Calif., formerly TRW,
Inc., was the prime development contractor for the observatory. The
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory controls science and flight
operations from the Chandra X-ray Center in Cambridge, Mass.
Electronic images and additional information are available at:
http://www.spitzer.caltech.edu/Media/index.shtml
http://hubblesite.org/news/2004/19
http://www.chandra.harvard.edu
Contact: Whitney Clavin (818) 648-9743
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Ray Villard (410) 338-4514
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Md.
Megan Watzke (617) 496-7998
Chandra X-Ray Observatory Center, Cambridge, Mass.
2004-138
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