Nereid said:
Two recently announced examples of these observations: http://www.eso.org/outreach/press-rel/pr-2004/pr-17-04.html .
IMHO, these are much more interesting than the earlier results, because those earlier ones had selection effects whose relevance could not be properly assessed (without further work).
Thank you for the links. Here is the Gemini press release with images and links to background resources, including techniques for taking out IR skyglow.
http://www.gemini.edu/project/announcements/press/2004-1.html
Press release said:
Astronomers trying to understand this issue might have to put everything on the table. "It is unclear if we need to tweak the existing models or develop a new one in order to understand this finding," said the survey's third Co-Principal Investigator, Dr. Patrick McCarthy (Observatories of the Carnegie Institution). "It is quite obvious from the Gemini spectra that these are indeed very mature galaxies, and we are not seeing the effects of obscuring dust. Obviously there are some major aspects about the early lives of galaxies that we just don't understand. It is even possible that black holes might have been much more ubiquitous than we thought in the early Universe and played a larger role in seeding early galaxy formation."
What is arguably the dominant galactic evolution theory postulates that the population of galaxies at this early stage should have been dominated by evolutionary building blocks. Aptly called the Hierarchical Model, it predicts that normal to large galaxies, like those studied in this work, would not yet exist and would instead be forming from local beehives of activity where big galaxies grew. The GDDS reveals that this might not be the case.
To Garth: we are overdue for a paradigm shift. Big Bang cosmologists are claiming some very high levels of accuracy for their currently accepted age of the universe (13.7Gy), but there are some flies in the ointment. A few are:
1) VERY old stars in globular clusters - maybe as old as the BB universe.
2) recent LUNA CNO-burning experiment suggesting that the GC stars may actually be significantly older than 14Gy
3) QSOs that are VERY old as judged by their redshifts (and older ones are discovered with every advance in telescopes and sensors). They are radiating more energy than 100s or even 1000s of galaxies. That is a HUGE amount of organization to expect to see in the infancy of the universe, according to existing models.
One thing the early, old, massive galaxies might prompt is a re-examination of mass-ejection in galactic formation. It is very frustrating when astronomers publish images of objects that seem to be clear-cut cases of mass ejection and caption them as "mergers" or "collisions". This is a very prevalent practice, and it overlooks the very real possibility that fission of galactic nuclei could be responsible for many of the interactions we see. Some mainstream scientists caption such images as "interactions", yet rarely do they suggest ejection as the mechanism for the interaction. With the discovery of very massive mature galaxies at such an early epoch, we may yet see a re-examination and modification of the heirachical model that encompasses fission and mass ejection as viable mechanisms in producing some of the interactions that we see.
Mass ejection is in good accordance with entropy (moving from highly-ordered massive galaxy to less well ordered host-companion systems), but seems quite unpopular in conventional astronomy these days. This is probably because folks like Hoyle and Arp, et al have proposed ejection as method of emergence of matter into a steady-state universe - a VERY unpopular idea to orthodox astronomers.
I think the next few years could be very exciting. :surprise: