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Quasar quandary upsets cosmic status quo.


In explaining the evolution of the universe, cosmologists face a formidable task. Although the cosmos apparently began as a highly uniform soup of matter and energy, it somehow congealed con·geal  
v. con·gealed, con·geal·ing, con·geals

v.intr.
1. To solidify by or as if by freezing: "My aim . . . was to take the Hill by storm before . . .
 into the lumpy collection of stars and galaxies seen today. Standard theories portray a relatively gradual transition between these two cosmological snapshots -- a time when the soupy soup·y  
adj. soup·i·er, soup·i·est
1. Having the appearance or consistency of soup.

2. Informal Foggy: soupy weather.

3. Informal Sentimental.
 material formed into idetifiable structures. New observational studies observational studies,
n.pl an investigational method involving description of the associations be-tween interventions and outcomes. Outcomes research and practice audits are examples of this investigational method.
, however, suggest the lumpiness began earlier in the universe than any current theory can easily explain.

These provocative findings emerge from the detection of extremely distant quasars Proper naming of quasars are by Catalogue Entry, Qxxxx±yy using B1950 coordinates, or QSO Jxxxx±yyyy using J2000 coordinates.

This page lists quasars.
  • 3C 449
  • 3C 48
  • 3C 212
  • 3C 273
  • QSO J1819+3845
  • QSO 2237+0305
  • Q0957+561
  • QSO J0842+1835
  • 3C 9
 -- massive, highly luminous powerhouses thought to lie at the center of some galaxies. Finding just a couple of these objects, as reported last month (SN: 5/4/91, p.276), might not carry enough statistical significance to challenge theoretical models of how and when the universe developed its complex structure. But last week, astronomers announced they had detected another 27 distant quasars -- a discovery that may provide the most compelling reason yet for modifying our notions about cosmic evolution Cosmic evolution is the scientific study of universal change. It is an intellectual framework that offers a grand synthesis of the many varied changes in the assembly and composition of radiation, matter, and life throughout the history of the universe.  after the Big Bang big bang

Model of the origin of the universe, which holds that it emerged from a state of extremely high temperature and density in an explosive expansion 10 billion–15 billion years ago.
.

An analysis of images from the U.K. Schmidt Telescope Schmidt telescope: see telescope.  at Epping, Australia Epping, Australia may refer to one of these suburbs:
  • Epping, New South Wales, a suburb of Sydney, Australia
  • Epping, Victoria, a suburb of Melbourne, Australia
, reveals that the most distant luminous quasars ever observed have the same density as those closer to Earth, report Richard McMahon and Michael Irwin of the University of Cambridge in England. Since viewing distant objects is essentially the same as peering back through time, this finding suggests that the universe contained about as much lumpiness when it was just 7 percent of its current age -- the first billion or so years of its existence -- as at later times.

"The present generation of theories can't explain this," McMahon says.

As recently as a decade ago, astronomers had found no extremely distant quasars -- those with spectra shifted strongly to the red -- and most didn't believe the objects existed, McMahon notes. But by using a computer scanning technique and special color criteria to analyze millions of images on photographic plates, McMahon and his collaborators found 20 quasars that rank among the most distant objects known.

All of the 20 quasars have a redshift redshift

Displacement of the spectrum of an astronomical object toward longer wavelengths (visible light shifts toward the red end of the spectrum). In 1929 Edwin Hubble reported that distant galaxies had redshifts proportionate to their distances (see
 between 4 and 5, which means they lie an estimated 10 to 12 billion light-years from Earth. McMahon and Irwin described these findings -- which increase the number of known objects in this high-redshift range to about 33 -- at a quasar quasar (kwā`sär), one of a class of blue celestial objects having the appearance of stars when viewed through a telescope and currently believed to be the most distant and most luminous objects in the universe; the name is shortened from  workshop last week in Victoria, British Columbia.

Another seven quasar discoveries emerged from a project in which McMahon compared radio sources found by the Very Large Array in Socorro, N.M., with corresponding visible-light images from a sky survey conducted at Mount Palomar in California. He identified 11 radio-loud quasars with redshifts between 3 and 4. The seven new ones, he says, include the most distant radio quasar ever detected -- lying more than 10 billion light-years from Earth.

McMahon says the relatively large number of high-redshift radio quasars he detected further supports the notion that the density of bright quasars doesn't diminish at far distances. At the same workshop, Maarten Schmidt of Caltech in Pasadena reported data suggesting that the density of less luminous quasars may decline beyond distances corresponding to a redshift of 3.

Theorists have yet to come to terms with "these improbable monsters," observes cosmologist Edward L. Turner of Princeton (N.J.) University. And this mother lode of distant quasars may represent just the first of many such challenges. Looming ahead, notes McMahon, are radio surveys that will search for quasars so distant and so highly redshifted that they would not appear on photographic plates.
COPYRIGHT 1991 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1991, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:discovery of distant quasars may force a revision of cosmic evolution theory
Author:Cowen, Ron
Publication:Science News
Date:Jun 15, 1991
Words:585
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