A Massive Galaxy long ago and Far away

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1. An extremely massive elliptical galaxy at about three billion years after the big bang, as seen in an optical/near-infrared image. The galaxy is about ten times more massive than the Milky Way. Today the galaxy is not actively producing new stars, but its population of old, red stars appears to be the result of earlier episodes during which the galaxy was one of the most active star-forming examples known. Credit: NASA/Hubble 2. Age and abundance patterns of COSMOS-11494 in comparison to lower-redshift quiescent galaxies.

1. An extremely massive elliptical galaxy at about three billion years after the big bang, as seen in an optical/near-infrared image. The galaxy is about ten times more massive than the Milky Way. Today the galaxy is not actively producing new stars, but its population of old, red stars appears to be the result of earlier episodes during which the galaxy was one of the most active star-forming examples known. Credit: NASA/Hubble
2. Age and abundance patterns of COSMOS-11494 in comparison to lower-redshift quiescent galaxies.

Galaxies today fall roughly into 2 categories: elliptically-shaped collections of reddish, old stars that formed predominantly during a period early in the history of the universe, and spiral shaped objects dominated by blue, young stars. The Milky Way is an example of the latter, a spiral galaxy actively making new stars. In order to understand the growth of galaxies over cosmic time and the past star formation history of the universe, astronomers study the population of old stars in distant ellipticals from earlier epochs, stars which in turn formed at an even early time. Star formation produces supernovae which enrich their environments with elements, including the diagnostic element magnesium. Measuring the amount of magnesium (relative to iron) in a galaxy thus helps to fix the strength and duration of prior episodes of star formation.

CfA astronomers Charlie Conroy and Jieun Choi and 8 colleagues used the spectrometer on the Keck telescope (along with some secondary datasets) to obtain very sensitive magnesium measurements in one of the most massive and luminous elliptical galaxies known. The galaxy, seen at an epoch only 3 billion years after the big bang, has a stellar mass of about 300 billion solar-masses (the Milky Way’s stellar mass is about 10 times less) but is currently making stars at a rate only about half that of the Milky Way. However, it’s Mg-to-Fe ratio indicates that earlier in its life it was making stars at a phenomenally high rate, perhaps as many as several thousand solar-masses each year, making it one of the most vigorous examples of star-formation known.

The scientists conclude that the bursts of star formation in this galaxy must have been due to mergers with other galaxies. In fact, they estimate that the object probably doubled in sized as a consequence of accreting smaller galaxies. Unfortunately this particular elliptical is so unusual that it cannot be considered a typical progenitor for any local elliptical galaxy. The team argues that additional observations of more, less extreme ellipticals in the early universe are now needed to fill in the rest of the story. The instruments on the James Webb Space Telescope, to be launched next year, should be capable of doing so.
https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/news/su201705 https://phys.org/news/2017-02-massive-galaxy.htmljCp

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v540/n7632/full/nature20570.html