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Showing 1–5 of 5 results
Advanced filters: Author: Bahram Mobasher Clear advanced filters
  • JWST’s COSMOS-Web survey is used to create an ultra-high-detail dark matter map, revealing hidden filaments, clusters and distant structures. By tracing features out to z = 2, this map shows how dark and luminous matter build the cosmic web across cosmic time.

    • Diana Scognamiglio
    • Gavin Leroy
    • John R. Weaver
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    P: 1-10
  • Massive clusters of galaxies have been found as early as 3.9 billion years after the Big Bang. Cosmological simulations predict that these systems should descend from 'protoclusters' — early overdensities of massive galaxies that merge hierarchically to form a cluster. Observational evidence for this picture, however, is sparse because high-redshift protoclusters are rare and difficult to observe. Here, a protocluster region 1 billion years (z = 5.3) after the Big Bang is reported. This cluster extends over >13 megaparsecs, contains a luminous quasar as well as a system rich in molecular gas. A lower limit of >4 × 1011 solar masses of dark and luminous matter in this region is placed, consistent with that expected from cosmological simulations.

    • Peter L. Capak
    • Dominik Riechers
    • Johannes G. Staguhn
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 470, P: 233-235
  • The ratio of magnesium to iron abundance is measured for a massive quiescent galaxy at a redshift of 2.1, corresponding to when the Universe was three billion years old.

    • Mariska Kriek
    • Charlie Conroy
    • Bahram Mobasher
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 540, P: 248-251
  • Ordinary baryonic particles account for only one-sixth of the total matter in the Universe, the rest being the mysterious 'dark matter'. This paper presents high-fidelity maps of the large-scale distribution of dark matter, resolved in both angle and depth. The results are consistent with predictions of gravitationally induced structure formation.

    • Richard Massey
    • Jason Rhodes
    • James Taylor
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 445, P: 286-290