PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Rutgers, Chilean astrophysicists discover new galaxy clusters revealed by cosmic 'shadows'

Team uses observations from powerful radio telescope in high Andean desert; results will help scientists understand how universe is evolving

Rutgers, Chilean astrophysicists discover new galaxy clusters revealed by cosmic 'shadows'
2010-11-02
(Press-News.org) NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. – An international team of scientists led by Rutgers University astrophysicists have discovered 10 new massive galaxy clusters from a large, uniform survey of the southern sky. The survey was conducted using a breakthrough technique that detects "shadows" of galaxy clusters on the cosmic microwave background radiation, a relic of the "big bang" that gave birth to the universe.

In a paper published in the Nov. 10 issue of Astrophysical Journal, the Rutgers scientists and collaborators at the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile (PUC) describe their visual telescope observations of these galaxy clusters, which were essential to verify the cosmic shadow sightings. Both observations will help scientists better understand how the universe was born and continues to evolve.

The research began in 2008 with a new radio telescope in the Atacama Desert of Chile – one of the driest places on Earth. The instrument, known as the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT), collects millimeter-length radio waves that reveal images of the otherwise invisible cosmic background radiation. Millimeter waves are easily blocked by water vapor, hence the telescope's home high in the Andes Mountains of northern Chile, where there is barely any atmospheric moisture.

"The groundbreaking observations at Atacama, led by Lyman Page of Princeton University, surveyed large areas of the sky to reveal shadows that pointed astronomers to these previously unseen massive galaxy clusters," said Felipe Menanteau, a research scientist in physics and astronomy, School of Arts and Sciences, at Rutgers.

Theorists Rashid Sunyaev and Yakov Zel'dovich predicted the shadow phenomenon 40 years ago, now known as the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect, or S-Z effect. Shortly thereafter astronomers verified it by observing shadows cast by previously known galaxy clusters. The higher sensitivity and resolution of ACT now makes it practical for astronomers to essentially reverse the procedure – to search the cosmic background radiation for shadows that indicate the presence of unseen clusters.

"The 'shadows' that ACT revealed are not shadows in the traditional sense, as they are not caused by the galaxy clusters blocking light from another source," said Jack Hughes, professor of physics and astronomy at Rutgers. "Rather, the hot gases within the galaxy clusters cause a tiny fraction of the cosmic background radiation to shift to higher energies, which then makes them appear as shadows in one of ACT's observing bands."

Cosmic background radiation was first observed by two Bell Labs astronomers in New Jersey back in the 1960s, a discovery that earned them the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1978.

Hughes and Menanteau worked with Chilean professors Leopoldo Infante and Felipe Barrientos to collect optical images of dozens of candidates, which led to the discovery of ten entirely new massive galaxy clusters. The Rutgers and PUC team, which also included PUC undergraduate student Jorge González, worked on two optical telescopes in Chile over the course of seven nights during October and December of 2009.

"We knew the experiment was working when we could see the giant clusters clearly, even in the raw images as they came through the telescope," said Menanteau.

"The technical challenges involved in exploiting the S-Z technique are daunting, and it is fantastic to see this method working so well," said Priyamvada Natarajan, professor of astronomy and physics at Yale University and a leading theoretical cosmologist not affiliated with the study. "It will build our inventory of the most massive and distant clusters in the universe, which will provide important constraints on the currently accepted cosmological model. I am personally excited to see the large number of strong lensing clusters that ACT is turning up."



INFORMATION:



The Rutgers and PUC observations were funded by the National Science Foundation's Partnerships for International Research and Education, in an award to Princeton with sub-awards to Rutgers and the University of Pennsylvania. The astronomers carried out their optical observations on the SOAR telescope in Cerro Pachón and the NTT in La Silla. The Atacama Cosmology Telescope project is funded by the National Science Foundation.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Rutgers, Chilean astrophysicists discover new galaxy clusters revealed by cosmic 'shadows'

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Microfluidics-imaging platform detects cancer growth signaling in minute biopsy samples

2010-11-02
Inappropriate growth and survival signaling, which leads to the aberrant growth of cancer cells, is a driving force behind tumors. Much of current cancer research focuses on the kinase enzymes whose mutations are responsible for such disregulated signaling, and many successful molecularly targeted anti-cancer therapeutics are directed at inhibiting kinase activity. Now, UCLA researchers from the Crump Institute for Molecular Imaging, the Institute for Molecular Medicine, the California NanoSystems Institute, the Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center and the department ...

UV light nearly doubles vacuum's effectiveness in reducing carpet microbes

2010-11-02
COLUMBUS, Ohio – New research suggests that the addition of ultraviolet light to the brushing and suction of a vacuum cleaner can almost double the removal of potentially infectious microorganisms from a carpet's surface when compared to vacuuming alone. Researchers say the findings suggest that incorporating the germicidal properties of UV light into vacuuming might have promise in reducing allergens and pathogens from carpets, as well. "What this tells us is there is a commercial vacuum with UV technology that's effective at reducing surface microbes. This has promise ...

Cancer drug linked to quantum dots increases drug uptake, reduces inflammation

Cancer drug linked to quantum dots increases drug uptake, reduces inflammation
2010-11-02
BUFFALO, N.Y. -- Researchers at the University at Buffalo have developed a novel technology using quantum dots that is expected to have major implications for research and treatment of tuberculosis, as well as other inflammatory lung diseases. A paper appearing online in Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine as an article-in-press describes specific delivery of a chemotherapeutic drug to specific cells in the lung, particularly the alveolar white cell, without causing acute inflammation. Quantum dots are tiny semiconductor particles generally no larger ...

Elderly women at higher risk for unnecessary urinary catheterization, study reports

2010-11-02
Washington, November 1, 2010 – Elderly women are at high risk for inappropriate urinary catheter utilization in emergency departments, according to a new study in the November issue of the American Journal of Infection Control, the official publication of the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC). The study was conducted at St John Hospital and Medical Center, a 769-bed tertiary care teaching hospital in Detroit, Mich. The authors examined 532 instances in which urinary catheters were placed in emergency room patients over a 12-week ...

Some city trees may discourage 'shady' behavior

Some city trees may discourage shady behavior
2010-11-02
Along with energy conservation and storm-water reduction, scientists may soon be adding crime-fighting to the list of benefits that urban trees provide. Researchers with the U.S. Forest Service's Pacific Northwest (PNW) and Southern Research Stations have published a new study that suggests that certain types of city trees may help lower property and violent crime rates. Their study—which is posted online in advance of its appearance in a forthcoming printed issue of the journal Environment and Behavior—is the first to examine the effects of trees and other factors on crime ...

'Training away stereotypes'

2010-11-02
COLUMBIA, Mo. – It may seem difficult to change stereotypical thinking. Perceptions can be very important in forming an individual's attitudes. Now, researchers at the University of Missouri have found that people conditioned to think in opposition to racial stereotypes are more receptive to people from minority groups starring in commercial advertising. Saleem Alhabash, a doctoral candidate in the University of Missouri School of Journalism. "This research shows that when people are trained to think in a non-stereotypical way, they will pay more attention to ads with ...

If GMO genes escape, how will the hybrids do?

2010-11-02
GMOs, or Genetically Modified Organisms, may raise concerns of genes escaping from crops and having unknown effects on natural, wild species. But what is the real risk that traits associated with GMOs will actually migrate to and persist in their wild relatives? Interest in plant ecology, crop production and weed management led John Lindquist and his colleagues from the University of Nebraska and USDA-ARS to investigate how gene flow from a cultivated crop to a weedy relative would influence the ecological fitness of a cropwild hybrid offspring. They published their findings ...

After good or bad events, people forget how they thought they'd feel

2010-11-02
WASHINGTON —People aren't very accurate at predicting how good or bad they'll feel after an event -- such as watching their team lose the big game or getting a flat-screen TV. But afterwards, they "misremember" what they predicted, revising their prognostications after the fact to match how they actually feel, according to new research. These findings appear in the November issue of the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, published by the American Psychological Association. Although the process of predicting emotions seems imprecise from start to finish, misremembering ...

Zebrafish yield clues to how we process visual information

2010-11-02
To a hungry fish on the prowl, the split-second neural processing required to see, track, and gobble up a darting flash of prey is a matter of survival. To scientists, it's a window into how our brain coordinates the eye motions that enable us to hit a baseball, sidestep an errant skateboarder, and otherwise make our way in a world full of danger and opportunity. This process is now better understood, thanks to a team of scientists that imaged the activity of individual neurons in a part of a zebrafish's brain called the optic tectum. The optic tectum receives signals ...

Management science guru, surviving cancer, offers hope to fellow sufferers, doctors

2010-11-02
When Stephen Barrager was diagnosed in 2007 with acute multiple myeloma, a form of bone marrow cancer, he endured the same anxiety that troubles all those who receive an upsetting diagnosis. The way he went about dealing with his disease and its treatment, however, was different. Barrager drew upon his engineering and management science background to help him make difficult decisions. Now he is sharing his insights with hospitals and doctors in his native Bay Area and with colleagues at a conference coming to Austin on Nov. 7, 2010. The annual meeting of the Institute ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

“Skin in a syringe” a step towards a new way to heal burns

BTI, Meiogenix and FFAR announce $2 million breakthrough tomato genetics collaboration

Better calibration for cuff-based blood pressure readings

The future of ‘personalized’ cancer treatment: Antitumor mRNA-based vaccines

Common food thickeners – long thought to pass right through us – are actually digested

Off-the-shelf cancer vaccine elicits strong immune response in patients with pancreatic and colorectal cancer

New strategy to boost the effect of immunotherapy in the most aggressive form of lung cancer

Counties with animal feeding operations have more air pollution, less health insurance coverage

Mirror-like graphite films break records in strength and conductivity

AI uncovers new antibiotics in ancient microbes

AI meets CRISPR for precise gene editing

New method to synthesize carbohydrates could pave the way to biomedical advances

Plants feed through one-way routes

3D-printed kidney tumors show potential for more targeted treatment

Cats with dementia share hallmarks of humans with Alzheimer’s

AI could soon detect early voice box cancer from the sound of your voice

New survey reveals top reasons why kids avoid going to school

Playtime a mostly mutual activity between dolphins and whales

Brain cells learn faster than machine learning, new research reveals

Mixed-dimensional nanowires/nanosheet heterojunction of GaSb/Bi2O2Se for self-powered near-infrared photodetection and photocommunication

Universities that eliminated admission test requirements saw gains in student body diversity

Head-to-head against AI, pharmacy students won

Only some emotions help posts go viral

Predicting risk in children with heart defects

Test performance improves when children can exercise briefly beforehand, UNCG researchers find

Meet IDEA: An AI assistant to help geoscientists explore Earth and beyond

Ready for market: New process boosts clean, cost-efficient chemical production

Losing weight before IVF may increase chance of pregnancy

New study uncovers how genetics and lifestyle drive the heart disease dilated cardiomyopathy

City of Hope study shows childhood cancer survivors face new health problems later in life

[Press-News.org] Rutgers, Chilean astrophysicists discover new galaxy clusters revealed by cosmic 'shadows'
Team uses observations from powerful radio telescope in high Andean desert; results will help scientists understand how universe is evolving