SPT0615-JD is a dwarf galaxy situated within the constellation Pictor, and is the farthest galaxy ever imaged by means of gravitational lensing, as of 2018.[1][3] Brett Salmon of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore was the lead scientist of the study of the galaxy.[2]
SPT0615-JD | |
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![]() SPT0615-JD (closer detailed image) using the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope (the galaxy is located towards the upper left, to the right of the group of two stars and one galaxy) | |
Observation data (J2000 epoch) | |
Constellation | Pictor[1] |
Right ascension | 06h 15m 55.03s[2] |
Declination | −57° 46′ 19.56″[2] |
Redshift | 9.9 [3] |
Distance | 13.27 billion light-years (light travel time) [3] 31.4 billion light-years (comoving distance) |
Characteristics | |
Mass | ~3 ×109[2] M☉ |
Size | < 2,500 ly[2] |
Apparent size (V) | 0.00065 x 0.00065 |
Other designations | |
RELICS SPT-CL J0615-5746 336, SCB2018 SPTJ0615-JD1 |
The galaxy was identified in the Hubble Space Telescope Reionization Lensing Cluster Survey (RELICS) and companion S-RELICS Spitzer program and is at the limits of Hubble's detection capabilities.[2] As a consequence of the effect of a gravitational field of a galaxy cluster of an extremely large size,[2] SPT-CL J0615-5746, (abbreviated to SPT0615),[1] situated at a distance closer to Earth, light from SPT0615-JD located at a further distance, is amplified and distorted (lensed - Einstein 1936; Khvolson 1924; Link 1936) on its motion to the Hubble telescope. This distortion causes the light from the galaxy to arrive as an image lengthened to an arc of about 2 arcseconds long.[2]
"JD" is short for "J-band Dropout" (the galaxy is not detected in the so-called J-band (F125W)[4] The observed image is of 13.3 billion years ago, indicating the galaxy existed when the universe was about only 500 million years in existence.[2] The galaxy is less than 2,500 light-years across.[2]