http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
On the origin of near-infrared extragalactic background light anisotropy
Zemcov, Michael,Smidt, Joseph,Arai, Toshiaki,Bock, James,Cooray, Asantha,Gong, Yan,Kim, Min Gyu,Korngut, Phillip,Lam, Anson,Lee, Dae Hee,Matsumoto, Toshio,Matsuura, Shuji,Nam, Uk Won,Roudier, Gael,Tsu American Association for the Advancement of Scienc 2014 Science Vol.346 No.6210
<P><B>A diffuse cosmic glow is not primordial</B></P><P>A cumulative map of all photons ever emitted by any star or galaxy is a highly desirable historical record of the universe's evolution. For this reason, cosmologists have sought to measure this diffuse distribution of light: the extragalactic background light. Zemcov <I>et al.</I> sent up a rocket to measure the fluctuations in this faint background and found largescale fluctuations greater than known galaxies alone should produce (see the Perspective by Moseley). Stars tidally stripped from their host galaxies are the most likely culprit, rather than unknown primordial galaxies.</P><P><I>Science</I>, this issue p. 732; see also p. 696</P><P>Extragalactic background light (EBL) anisotropy traces variations in the total production of photons over cosmic history and may contain faint, extended components missed in galaxy point-source surveys. Infrared EBL fluctuations have been attributed to primordial galaxies and black holes at the epoch of reionization (EOR) or, alternately, intrahalo light (IHL) from stars tidally stripped from their parent galaxies at low redshift. We report new EBL anisotropy measurements from a specialized sounding rocket experiment at 1.1 and 1.6 micrometers. The observed fluctuations exceed the amplitude from known galaxy populations, are inconsistent with EOR galaxies and black holes, and are largely explained by IHL emission. The measured fluctuations are associated with an EBL intensity that is comparable to the background from known galaxies measured through number counts and therefore a substantial contribution to the energy contained in photons in the cosmos.</P>