Lost and found: Hubble finds much of the Universe's missing hydrogen
Astronomers detected vast filaments of invisible hydrogen by using the light of a distant quasar (core of active galaxy) to probe the dark space between the galaxies. The Hubble Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph found the spectral 'fingerprints' of highly ionized intervening oxygen (which is a tracer of the hydrogen) superimposed on the quasar's light. Slicing across billions of light-years of space, the quasar's brilliant beam penetrated at least four separate filaments of the invisible hydrogen laced with the telltale oxygen. This filamentary structure is throughout the universe, all the way out to the distance of the quasar.
For simplification, this graphic isolates the filamentary structure to a specific location along the line of sight to the quasar.
Credit:John Godfrey (STScI)
About the Image
About the Object
Name: | Interstellar Hydrogen |
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Type: | Early Universe : Galaxy : Activity : AGN : Quasar Unspecified : Cosmology : Morphology : Large-Scale Structure |
Category: | Quasars and Black Holes |