Key facts
- Neutral gas is essential for star formation and galaxy expansion in the early Universe.
- Researchers detected neutral gas in galaxies 700-800 million years after the Big Bang using ALMA and JWST.
- The [O I] 145 micrometer emission line was used as a direct tracer for neutral gas.
- The study suggests early galaxies were compact regions with dense gas supporting active star formation.
- The findings open a new window into understanding the fuel behind star formation and galaxy evolution.
New research has provided direct evidence of neutral gas within distant galaxies, shedding light on its crucial role in the formation of stars and the expansion of galaxies in the early Universe. Scientists have long understood that stars originate from gas clouds, but directly observing the neutral gas that fuels this process has been a significant challenge.
A study led by researchers from Chiba University in Japan, utilizing data from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), has overcome this hurdle. They successfully detected signals from neutral gas in galaxies that existed approximately 700 to 800 million years after the Big Bang.
Neutral gas acts as the primary material for star formation in young galaxies. Gravity causes large clouds of this gas to gather and collapse, forming dense regions where stars are born. The emergence of these stars contributes mass and energy, driving galaxy growth and expansion. This continuous process of star formation from neutral gas has been instrumental in shaping the Universe and creating the galaxies observed today.
The research focused on a specific signal, the [O I] 145 micrometer emission line, which is produced by neutral oxygen atoms and serves as a direct tracer of neutral gas. By detecting this signal, scientists could study the material fueling star formation. Unlike ionized gas, which can be detected by other means, neutral gas has been more difficult to observe directly across vast cosmic distances.
The team observed four star-forming galaxies from the early Universe and successfully detected the [O I] 145 micrometer emission line in all of them. To strengthen their findings, they also examined the [N II] 205 micrometer emission line, which traces only ionized gas. The weak or absent [N II] signal in these galaxies suggested that the detected emission primarily originated from neutral gas.
According to Dr. Yoshinobu Fudamoto, one of the lead researchers, these observations represent the most distant direct detection of neutral gas in typical star-forming galaxies to date. Analysis of the data indicated very high gas densities, comparable to starburst galaxies known for intense star formation, but with a lower radiation field. This suggests that early galaxies were compact regions where dense gas supported active star formation.
The study establishes the [O I] emission line as a valuable tool for investigating neutral gas in the early Universe, opening new avenues for understanding the fuel behind star formation and galaxy evolution. By combining different observational signals, astronomers can now gain a clearer understanding of how galaxies formed and evolved, with ALMA and JWST complementing each other in studying cosmic history. The researchers plan to expand their observations to a larger sample of galaxies to build a more comprehensive picture of galaxy formation.