Publications by authors named "P L Capak"

The rest-frame ultraviolet properties of galaxies during the first three billion years of cosmic time (redshift z > 4) indicate a rapid evolution in the dust obscuration of such galaxies. This evolution implies a change in the average properties of the interstellar medium, but the measurements are systematically uncertain owing to untested assumptions and the inability to detect heavily obscured regions of the galaxies. Previous attempts to measure the interstellar medium directly in normal galaxies at these redshifts have failed for a number of reasons, with two notable exceptions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Massive galaxy clusters dating back to 3.9 billion years after the Big Bang contain stars formed even earlier, as predicted by cold dark matter cosmological models.
  • Researchers discovered a protocluster from 1 billion years post-Big Bang (z = 5.3), which is over 13 megaparsecs wide and includes a bright quasar and abundant molecular gas.
  • The observed massive galaxies in this region suggest there is at least 400 billion times the mass of our sun in dark and luminous matter, aligning with simulations for early galaxy clusters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Historically, variable and transient sources have both surprised astronomers and provided new views of the heavens. Here we report the discovery of an optical transient in the outskirts of the lenticular galaxy Messier 85 in the Virgo cluster. With a peak absolute R magnitude of -12, this event is distinctly brighter than novae, but fainter than type Ia supernovae (which are expected in a population of old stars in lenticular galaxies).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ordinary baryonic particles (such as protons and neutrons) account for only one-sixth of the total matter in the Universe. The remainder is a mysterious 'dark matter' component, which does not interact via electromagnetism and thus neither emits nor reflects light. As dark matter cannot be seen directly using traditional observations, very little is currently known about its properties.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF