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19 December 2010

Science! It works, bitches!

The title is homage to an XKCD comic.  But that's not the purpose of this post, but rather to state something so fucking obvious that there should be no way that people shouldn't understand it, but they sadly don't...  The following article is about science predicting something, and then later people finding it.  Which is in stark contrast to all the failed "predictions" and "prophesies" of holy books...  As Carl Sagan said in Demon Haunted World:
Think of how many religions attempt to validate themselves with prophecy. Think of how many people rely on these prophecies, however vague, however unfulfilled, to support or prop up their beliefs. Yet has there ever been a religion with the prophetic accuracy and reliability of science? ... No other human institution comes close.
And yet again and again, religion falls flat on its face, while science actually progresses forward.  Why the hell do people still believe it?  Maybe someone else can answer that, because I can't fathom that someone would intentionally intellectually castrate themselves like that....

Across the Universe, the stars cry out

A few years back, astronomers discovered that some distant galaxies were blasting out vast amounts of infrared light, but were very faint in visible light, the kind we see. They termed these objects ULIRGs ("you-lurgs"), for Ultra Luminous Infrared Galaxies. The idea is that these galaxies are forming lots of stars, but there was so much dust choking the region that all the visible light was blocked. However, infrared light can pierce through the dust, so telescopes that detect IR can see them. Due to the physics of the situation, astronomers also figured there must be two populations of these galaxies; the ones they had found, and another that was (very) slightly warmer.

Well, they finally found some from that second group:

spire_ULIRGS
I know, they don’t look like much, do they? But you have to realize what you’re seeing here: those circled blobs of light are entire galaxies, with billions of stars, and they’re a staggering 11 billion light years away.
That’s really, really far. The Universe is only 13.7 billion years old, so we’re seeing these galaxies as they were just a few billion years after the entire Universe came into being. Not only that, but the amount of infrared light these galaxies are emitting is truly terrifying: in the infrared alone, they are blasting out a solid trillion times the Sun’s entire energy output.

A trillion! 1,000,000,000,000! That’s a whole lot of energy. And it comes from a whole lot of newborn stars, because these galaxies are cranking out stars at a rate 700 times that of our own Milky Way galaxy! The view inside those galaxies must be breathtaking; imagine being surrounded by the Orion Nebula everywhere you look. Wow.

SWIRE_LockmansurveyWhat cracks me up about this too, is how they found them. The European Space Agency is using the orbiting Herschel Infrared Observatory to take a survey of galaxies in the IR. It’s finding a lot of them; in the picture above every dot you see is an infrared source, most likely a galaxy. And that’s a small section of the sky; on the right is an image of a bigger part of the survey. You need to click it and see it full-res to get a sense of how many freaking galaxies there are out there!

As far as astronomical discoveries go, this is another in a long series of steps needed to understand the Universe. I know that in your daily life this may not affect you much; you have other things on your mind, daily stresses and such. But you know what? While I go about my everyday business, in my mind I’m occupied by all the mundane and gross worries of life just like you are, just like everyone else is. But somewhere back there, in some part of my brain, there is knowledge that sits there… and every now and again, it makes itself known.

We can see galaxies a hundred billion trillion kilometers away! We know that stars are being born there, stars like the Sun, and they’re being born every day! If you were there, the sky would be a riot of red and green gas strewn in sheets and ribbons and shock waves and festooned with brilliant jewel-like stars everywhere you looked!

Those wonders are out there, and they’re real. That makes my life better, just knowing that.

Image credit: ESA/SPIRE/HerMES


Related posts:
- Herschel opens its eye
- Herschel eyes the infrared Southern Cross
- Chaos! Turbulence! Blowouts! Herschel!
- Record-breaking galaxy found at the edge of the Universe

4 comments:

TomsRants said...

Something you failed to mention. Those stars you see "being born" were born 11 billion years ago. They're all dead now, and the galaxy that spawned them. Any civilizations that may have developed there are also long gone - gone billions of years before our own star formed, even.

Science works, but it's also a bitch.

Unknown said...

Excellent point Tom. And I love your addendum to the "rule". I think I'll use it!

Tony Davis said...

Larian,

My personal favorite (because so many fundies like to ridicule evolution) is Neil Shubin's PREDICTION that if he looked in rocks of the right age he might find a transitional fossil (something fundies say doesn't exist) between fish and tetrapods. Sure enough, Tiktaalik, one of the great discoveries in the fossil record was found exactly where he predicted.

Unknown said...

You mean just like I say on this page in the second bullet. :) Yeah, science is cool that way.