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Keck’s Cosmic Web Image Awarded Top Ten Breakthrough for 2014

s. cantalupo (ucsc); w. m. keck observatory
This deep image shows the nebula (cyan) extending across 2 million light-years that was discovered around the bright quasar UM287 (at the center of the image). The energetic radiation of the quasar makes the surrounding intergalactic gas glow, revealing the morphology and physical properties of a cosmic web filament. The image was obtained at the W. M. Keck Observatory.

MAUNA KEA, HAWAII – UC Santa Cruz astronomers who used the W. M. Keck Observatory to capture the first image of a filament of the “cosmic web” have been recognized by the editors of Physics World for one of the “Top Ten Breakthroughs of 2014”.

The team, led by UC Santa Cruz astronomers Sebastiano Cantalupo (now at ETH Zurich), J. Xavier Prochaska, and Piero Madau, detected the glowing gas of the filament due to its illumination by the intense radiation given off by a distant quasar. Using Keck Observatory’s Keck I telescope in Hawaii, they observed a very large, luminous nebula of gas extending about 2 million light-years across intergalactic space, which they nicknamed the ‘Slug Nebula’ in honor of UCSC’s banana slug mascot.

This is the second time that Prochaska’s research group has been recognized by Physics World for a top ten breakthrough. In 2011, his team’s discovery of pristine clouds of gas formed shortly after the Big Bang was also featured as one of nine runners-up to the “Breakthrough of the Year” in Science magazine in addition to making the Physics World top ten.

“It may never happen again, so I’m especially amazed to get this acknowledgement a second time,” said Prochaska, a professor of astronomy and astrophysics at UCSC.

“This award is also for Keck Observatory and for all the people that work there,” said Cantalupo. “Without their wonderful support, this discovery would have not be possible. Many people helped me install and use the filter that enabled this discovery, including Luca Rizzi, Marc Kassis, Dwight Chan, Gary Anderson, Greg Wirth and others.”

Prochaska noted that a new instrument is being built for Keck Observatory that will greatly facilitate future research on the cosmic web. The Keck Cosmic Web Imager (KCWI) will be able to perform “spectral imaging,” capturing both an image and a spectrum of an object simultaneously. Keck Observatory is currently working with the UC Observatories instrument labs at UC Santa Cruz to develop the camera for KCWI.

Physics World is an international monthly magazine published by the Institute of Physics. In addition to Cantalupo, Prochaska, and Madau, the coauthors of the cosmic web paper included Fabrizio Arrigoni-Battaia and Joseph Hennawi of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg. For more information about the cosmic web discovery, see “Distant quasar illuminates a filament of the cosmic web.”