Information from the European
Southern Observatory
ESO Press Release
27/00
20 December
2000
Embargoed until 20 December 20:00 hrs CET
(19:00 UT) |
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VLT Observations Confirm
that the Universe Was Hotter in the Past
UVES Measures the Cosmic
Temperature 12 Billion Years Ago
Summary
A fundamental prediction of
the Big Bang theory has finally been
verified .
For the first time, an actual measurement has been made of
the temperature of the cosmic microwave
background radiation, at a time when the
Universe was only about 2.5 billion years
old . This fundamental and very difficult
observation was achieved by a team of
astronomers from India, France and ESO [1].
They obtained a detailed spectrum of a quasar in
the distant Universe, using the UV-Visual
Echelle Spectrograph (UVES) instrument at
the ESO
8.2-m VLT KUEYEN telescope at the Paranal
Observatory .
If the Universe was indeed formed in a Big
Bang, as most astrophysicists believe, the glow
of this primeval fireball should have been
warmer in the past. This is exactly what is
found by the new measurements.
The analysis of the VLT spectrum of the
distant quasar not only gives the definitive
proof of the presence of the relict radiation in
the early Universe, it also shows that it was
indeed significantly warmer than it is today, as
predicted by the theory.
PR
Photo 35/00 : VLT spectrum of
the distant quasar PKS 1232+0815 ,
displaying lines of carbon atoms from an
intervening cloud in which the cosmic
temperature was measured.
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The Cosmic Microwave
Background Radiation (CMBR)
One of the fundamental predictions of the Hot
Big Bang theory for the creation of the Universe
is the existence of the Cosmic
Microwave Background Radiation (CMBR) .
This relict radiation of the primeval fireball
was discovered in 1964 by means of radio
observations by American physicists Arno A.
Penzias and Robert W. Wilson, who were
rewarded with the Nobel Prize in 1978 . Precision
measurements by the COBE satellite later showed that
this ancient radiation fills the Universe, with a
present-day temperature of slightly less than 3
degrees above the absolute zero (2.7 K [Kelvin],
or -270.4 °C).
This radiation comes from all directions and is
extremely uniform. However, slight temperature
variations in different directions have been
measured, most recently by means of detailed
observations from a balloon above Antarctica (the
Boomerang experiment).
Since the universe is expanding, it must have
been denser in the past. A particular prediction
of the Big Bang theory is also that the
temperature of the CMBR must have been higher at
earlier times. However, although quite a few
attempts have been made, no clear observational
confirmation of this has been possible so far. In
fact, the best observations until now have only
been able to establish upper limits to the cosmic
temperature at earlier epochs.
But proof is now available from
new observations carried out with the Ultra-violet
and Visual Echelle Spectrograph (UVES) at the
8.2-m VLT KUEYEN telescope on Paranal .
Very demanding
observations
The further we look out into the Universe, the
further we look back in time.
It was actually suggested more than 30 years
ago that the predicted increase of temperature
with distance (redshift) could be tested by
observing specific absorption lines in the spectra
of distant quasars.
The idea is simply that at earlier epochs, the
CMBR was hot enough to excite certain atomic
levels, and thus to give rise to particular
absorption lines in the spectrum of a celestial
object.
Some faint absorption lines of neutral carbon
atoms were found to be especially promising, in
the sense that they were predicted to be very
sensitive to the surrounding temperature. However,
previous generations of (smaller) astronomical
telescopes were unable to achieve spectra of
sufficient quality of these faint absorption lines
in faint and remote objects in the distant (i.e.,
early) Universe.
The need to isolate the CMBR
effects
The advent of 8-m class telescopes has now
changed this situation. A few years ago, the 10-m
Keck telescope (Mauna Kea, Hawaii, USA) obtained a
spectrum of a quasar that was sufficiently
detailed to determine an upper
limit to the temperature of the CMBR at the
corresponding epoch, about 3.4 billion years after
the Big Bang.
However, a major difficulty of such
observations is the necessity to
exclude other sources of excitation (heating)
. It is well known that some other physical
processes may also affect the observed absorption
lines, such as collisions between the atoms and
heating by the ultraviolet light emitted by young
and hot stars.
The main problem is therefore to
disentangle the various effects in order to
"isolate" that of the CMBR . This can only be
achieved by means of exceptionally "clean" and
detailed spectra of these faint objects, an
exceedingly demanding task.
For that reason all previous measurements have
only led to upper limits on the CMBR
temperature.
A quasar to the rescue
ESO PR Photo
35/00
[Preview
- JPEG: 611 x 400 pix - 74k]
[Normal
- JPEG: 1222 x 800 pix - 192k]
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Caption : PR Photo 35/00 shows a small
part of the spectrum of the distant quasar PKS 1232+0815 , as obtained with
the UVES spectrograph at the 8.2-m VLT KUEYEN
telescope at Paranal. Some carbon absorption
lines from an intervening cloud are identified,
that are sensitive to the Cosmic Microwave
Background Radiation (CMBR). Technical
information about this photo is available
below. |
The new VLT spectrum of the quasar PKS 1232+0815 provides the long
hoped-for break-through in this important area of
cosmological research.
On its way to us, the light from this distant
object is absorbed by intervening material, among
other by a gaseous cloud in a galaxy at high
redshift (z = 2.34). This distance corresponds to
a cosmic time when the Universe was less than one
fifth of its present age.
In addition to the CMBR-sensitive carbon lines,
the resulting, unique spectrum shows an
extraordinary wealth of other absorption lines ,
revealing the presence of several elements in
various states of excitation. There are, in
particular, a large number lines of molecular
hydrogen. The multitude of information derived
from these lines was the key to deducing the
temperature of the CMBR impinging on the
galaxy.
A subsequent, detailed analysis allowed the
determination of the physical conditions in the
cloud - the presence of molecular hydrogen lines
was crucial for this to succeed. It clearly showed
that the excitation process of atomic collisions
cannot be solely responsible for the shape and
strength of the observed absorption lines. An
additional source of excitation must thus be
present and this can only be the heating by the
CMBR.
The primary outcome is therefore the first firm evidence that the
relict radiation was also present in the distant
past .
Moreover, it was possible to place constraints
on the effect of other possible excitation
processes. This made it possible for the
astronomers to derive the
temperature T of the CMBR at this large distance
and early cosmic epoch and to place a very firm
lower limit on this temperature. The final result
is that T is hotter than 6 K and cooler than 14 K;
this is in full agreement with the Big Bang
prediction of T = 9 K.
This is thus the first real proof that the CMBR
was indeed warmer in the past.
More information
The research described in this Press Release is
reported in a research article ("Determination of
the microwave background temperature at a redshift
of 2.33771"), that appears in the international
research jounal Nature on Thursday,
December 21, 2000. The full article is also
available on the web at http://babbage.sissa.it/abs/astro-ph/0012222
(astro-ph/0012222).
Note
[1]: The team consists of
Raghunathan Srianand (Inter University
Center for Astronomy and Astrophysics [IUCAA],
Pune, India), Patrick Petitjean (Institut
d'Astrophysique de Paris and Observatoire de
Paris-Meudon, France) and Cedric Ledoux
(European Southern Observatory, Garching,
Germany).
PR Photo 35/00 is
based on observations with the UVES
high-dispersion spectrograph at the VLT 8.2-m
KUEYEN telescope at Paranal, obtained on April 5
and 7, 2000. It shows a part of the spectrum of
the quasar PKS 1232+0815 (V =
18.4; z = 2.57), with the redshifted, ultraviolet
absorption lines of neutral carbon in an
intervening cloud (z = 2.34). Lines from the same
excitation levels are connected. The observed
spectrum is fully drawn; the best model fit is
indicated with a dashed curve. The wavelength is
given in Ångstrom units (1 nm = 10 Å). The slit
width was 1 arcsec; the spectral resolution about
45,000 and the integration lasted 3 hours.
Contacts
Raghunathan Srianand Inter
University Center for Astronomy and Astrophysics
(IUCAA) Pune, India Tel.: +91-20-565-1414
(ext. 320) email: anand@iucaa.ernet.in
Patrick Petitjean Institut
d'Astrophysique de Paris France Tel.:
+33-1-44328150 email: ppetitje@iap.fr
Cedric Ledoux European Southern
Observatory Garching, Germany Tel.:
+49-89-32006420 email: cledoux@eso.org
© ESO Education & Public Relations
Department Karl-Schwarzschild-Strasse 2,
D-85748 Garching, Germany
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