Hubble Uncovers the Farthest Star Ever Seen
The team had been using Hubble to monitor a supernova in the far-distant spiral galaxy when, in 2016, they spotted a new point of light not far from the magnified supernova. From the position of the new source, they inferred that it should be much more highly magnified than the supernova.
NASA – April 2, 2018 -- More than
halfway across the universe, an enormous blue star nicknamed Icarus is the farthest
individual star ever seen. Normally, it would be much too faint to view, even
with the world’s largest telescopes. But through a quirk of nature that
tremendously amplifies the star’s feeble glow, astronomers using NASA’s Hubble
Space Telescope were able to pinpoint this faraway star and set a new distance
record. They also used Icarus to test one theory of dark matter, and to probe
the make-up of a foreground galaxy cluster.
The star, harbored in a very distant
spiral galaxy, is so far away that its light has taken 9 billion years to reach
Earth. It appears to us as it did when the universe was about 30 percent of its
current age.
The discovery of Icarus through
gravitational lensing has initiated a new way for astronomers to study
individual stars in distant galaxies. These observations provide a rare,
detailed look at how stars evolve, especially the most luminous stars.
“This is the first time we’re seeing a
magnified, individual star,” explained former University of California at
Berkeley postdoc and study leader Patrick Kelly now of the University of
Minnesota, Twin Cities. “You can see individual galaxies out there, but this
star is at least 100 times farther away than the next individual star we can
study, except for supernova explosions.”
Gravity as a Natural Cosmic Lens
The cosmic quirk that makes this star
visible is a phenomenon called “gravitational lensing.” Gravity from a
foreground, massive cluster of galaxies acts as a natural lens in space,
bending and amplifying light. Sometimes light from a single background object
appears as multiple images. The light can be highly magnified, making extremely
faint and distant objects bright enough to see.
In the case of Icarus, a natural
“magnifying glass” is created by a galaxy cluster called MACS J1149+2223.
Located about 5 billion light-years from Earth, this massive cluster of
galaxies sits between the Earth and the galaxy that contains the distant star.
By combining the strength of this gravitational lens with Hubble’s exquisite
resolution and sensitivity, astronomers can see and study Icarus.
The team — including Jose Diego of the
Instituto de Física de Cantabria, Spain, and Steven Rodney of the University of
South Carolina, Columbia — dubbed the star “Icarus,“ after the Greek
mythological character who flew too near the Sun on wings of feathers and wax
that melted. (Its official name is MACS J1149+2223 Lensed Star 1.) Much like
Icarus, the background star had only fleeting glory as seen from Earth: It
momentarily skyrocketed to 2,000 times its true brightness when temporarily
magnified.
Models suggest that the tremendous
brightening was probably from the gravitational amplification of a star,
similar in mass to the Sun, in the foreground galaxy cluster when the star
moved in front of Icarus. The star’s light is usually magnified by about 600
times due to the foreground cluster’s mass.
Characterizing IcarusThe team had been using Hubble to monitor a supernova in the far-distant spiral galaxy when, in 2016, they spotted a new point of light not far from the magnified supernova. From the position of the new source, they inferred that it should be much more highly magnified than the supernova.
When they analyzed the colors of the
light coming from this object, they discovered it was a blue supergiant star.
This type of star is much larger, more massive, hotter, and possibly hundreds
of thousands of times intrinsically brighter than our Sun. But at this
distance, it would still be too far away to see without the amplification of
gravitational lensing, even for Hubble.
How did Kelly and his team know Icarus
was not another supernova? “The source isn’t getting hotter; it’s not
exploding. The light is just being magnified,” said Kelly. “And that’s what you
expect from gravitational lensing.”
Looking for Dark Matter
Detecting the amplification of a
single, pinpoint background star provided a unique opportunity to test the
nature of dark matter in the cluster. Dark matter is an invisible material that
makes up most of the universe’s mass.
By probing what’s floating around in
the foreground cluster, scientists were able to test one theory that dark
matter might be made up mostly of a huge number of primordial black holes
formed in the birth of the universe with masses tens of times larger than the
Sun. The results of this unique test disfavor that hypothesis, because light
fluctuations from the background star, monitored with Hubble for 13 years,
would have looked different if there were a swarm of intervening black holes.
When NASA's James Webb Space Telescope
is launched, astronomers expect to find many more stars like Icarus. Webb's
extraordinary sensitivity will allow measurement of even more details,
including whether these distant stars are rotating. Such magnified stars may
even be found to be fairly common.
The Hubble Space Telescope is a
project of international cooperation between NASA and ESA (European Space
Agency). NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt , Maryland ,
manages the telescope. The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore , Maryland ,
conducts Hubble science operations. STScI is operated for NASA by the
Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, in Washington , D.C.
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2018/hubble-uncovers-the-farthest-star-ever-seen
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