Precise locations of more than a million galaxies revealed

PAUCam on the William Herschel Telescope
PAUCam on the William Herschel Telescope
The precise distances from Earth of more than 1.8 million galaxies have been revealed in a sky survey involving UCL researchers.

The Physics of the Accelerating Universe Survey (PAUS), an international collaboration across 14 institutions, covered a sky area of 50 square degrees, similar to approximately 250 full moons. It was able to determine galaxy distances with unprecedented precision, using the specially designed PAUCam camera on the 4.2-metre William Herschel Telescope (WHT) in La Palma, Spain. This included galaxies more than 10 billion light years away.

Surveys of distant galaxies come in two flavours: photometric surveys, which take high-fidelity images of the sky and capture all’astronomical objects that are bright enough to be detected in those images, and spectroscopic surveys, which target a known light source and study its spectrum, i.e. its light distribution over a broad range of wavelengths. This mode is limited in how many galaxies can be observed, and how faint those can be, but gives a wealth of information about each galaxy.

Collaboration member Professor Benjamin Joachimi, of the UCL Department of Physics & Astronomy, explained that PAUS "combines the advantages of photometric and spectroscopic surveys".

He said: "We do take images and therefore capture all visible objects in the sky, but do so by putting narrow wavelength filters on the camera such that we know the light we collect originates from a certain part of the spectrum. By using 40 such filters we can reconstruct a low-resolution version of the galaxy’s spectrum.

"The survey will enable us to explore how galaxies connect to their environment, which mostly consists of dark matter, and to understand how far away galaxies of a certain type and brightness are, which helps us do more accurate science with surveys that don’t have this information."

The new catalogue will enable astronomers to create more accurate maps to understand how structure forms in the Universe and to study the Universe’s expansion under the influence of dark matter and dark energy.

Dark energy is thought to constitute about 70% of the Universe and be responsible for the Universe’s accelerating expansion, yet its nature remains a mystery.

The collaboration was led by the Institute of Space Sciences (ICE-CSIC), supported by Spain’s Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities. The data was collected over 200 nights between 2015 and 2019. The catalogue is available on the PAUS website and the CosmoHub web portal.

Professor Enrique Gaztañaga, Director of the PAU Survey based at the University of Portsmouth, ICE-CSIC and the Institute of Space Studies of Catalonia (IEEC), said: "The PAU Survey offers a groundbreaking approach to creating cosmic maps, made possible through the design and development of a novel instrument and a dedicated survey to collect and analyse data in ways never done before. It has been a privilege to collaborate with such a talented and dependable group."

The catalogue release is detailed in two articles published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS): one measuring distances and another one on calibration of the PAUS data.

David Navarro-Gironés, PhD candidate at ICE-CSIC and first author of one of the new papers, said: "The great advantage of PAUS is that it...[allows] for highly accurate distance measurements. This level of precision is crucial for the study of the structure of the universe, which in turn requires data from a large number of galaxies."

Nine years after its first light in 2015, PAUS is able to measure the distances of numerous distant galaxies with a relative precision of 0.3%. The team is currently using this data to enhance the calibration of existing cosmological surveys.

For instance, PAUS data is being used to improve weak lensing analyses and simulations for dark energy missions such as the European Space Agency’s Euclid mission, whose massive optical camera was built by an international team led by UCL researchers, and the Rubin Observatory’s Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST).

    Mark Greaves

    m.greaves [at] ucl.ac.uk

    +44 (0)20 3108 9485
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