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This is Scientific American’s 60-Second Science. I’m Steve Mirsky. Got a minute?
Five very old galaxies1 are now known to astrophysicists, thanks to Albert Einstein. A century ago, Einstein predicted an effect called cosmic gravitational lensing. Picture a massive galaxy2 out in space. From our vantage point, a second galaxy happens to be behind the first galaxy. That second galaxy should be hidden to us. Except that the nearer galaxy bends the light of the far galaxy coming our way. That light can sometimes become so distorted that it actually appears to ring the nearer galaxy. It’s called an Einstein ring, because he predicted that, too.
In the new study, researchers used the Herschel Space Observatory3. The brightest spots on their sky map all turned out to be gravitationally magnified galaxies. The study is in the journal Science. The observatory is really detecting infrared4 info, or heat, rather than visible light from the newly discovered galaxies. That radiation started coming our way when the universe was only two to four billion years old, less than a third of its current age. Researchers expect to find hundreds of new, old galaxies this way, along with new info about the early universe.
Thanks for the minute. For Scientific American’s 60-Second Science. I’m Steve Mirsky.
1 galaxies | |
星系( galaxy的名词复数 ); 银河系; 一群(杰出或著名的人物) | |
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2 galaxy | |
n.星系;银河系;一群(杰出或著名的人物) | |
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3 observatory | |
n.天文台,气象台,瞭望台,观测台 | |
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4 infrared | |
adj./n.红外线(的) | |
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