DESI maps 13m galaxies

The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) project has released a 270TB dataset mapping 13.1 million galaxies and 1.6 million quasars.

The map covers more than 14,000 square degrees of sky – nearly one-third of the entire night sky. DESI allows researchers to map objects up to 11 billion light-years away. 

DESI can observe patterns in the cosmos called baryonic acoustic oscillations (BAOs) which were created after the Big Bang, when the universe was filled with a hot plasma of atomic nuclei and electrons.


 

Density waves associated with quantum fluctuations in the Big Bang rippled through this plasma, until about 379,000 years after the Big Bang. Then, the temperature dropped sufficiently to allow the atomic nuclei to sweep up all the electrons. 


This froze the plasma density waves into regions of high mass density (where galaxies formed) and low density (intergalactic space). These density fluctuations are the BAOs; and they can be mapped by doing statistical analyses of the separation between pairs of galaxies and quasars.

DESI maps 13m galaxies

Long  exposure star trails over the Mayall telescope where DESI is installed.

(Credit: Luke Tyas, Berkeley Lab and KPNO/NOIR Lab/NSF/AURA).

 

David Manners

David Manners

David Manners has more than forty-years experience writing about the electronics industry, its major trends and leading players. As well as writing business, components and research news, he is the author of the site's most popular blog, Mannerisms. This features series of posts such as Fables, Markets, Shenanigans, and Memory Lanes, across a wide range of topics.

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