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The most important lesson from JWST’s “baby Milky Way”

The Firefly Sparkle galaxy was only spotted because of gravitational lensing’s effects. Yet galaxies like these brought us a visible cosmos.
The image showcases the JWST observations of the Firefly Sparkle galaxy alongside UGC 12158, a modern Milky Way analogue. It includes a reconstructed galaxy reminiscent of a baby Milky Way, beautifully interpreted through a lens model.
The Firefly Sparkle galaxy observed with JWST (left) reveals ten bursty star clusters stretched and magnified by gravitational lensing. The reconstruction of the original galaxy (middle) is made possible by the creation of a map for the foreground lens, revealing a precursor galaxy that's analogous to a modern Milky Way-like galaxy (right).
Credits: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Chris Willott (NRC-Canada), Lamiya Mowla (Wellesley College), Kartheik Iyer (Columbia) (left); NASA, ESA, CSA, Ralf Crawford (STScI) (mid); ESA/Hubble & NASA (right)
Key Takeaways
  • One of the great puzzles of living within the Milky Way is that of how we formed and grew up: we have only a snapshot of what survives, now, 13.8 billion years along in our cosmic history.
  • With observatories like Hubble and JWST, however, we can see back into the very early Universe, sometimes getting a “natural assist” from the magnification of gravitational lensing.
  • With the new discovery of the Firefly Sparkle, we’re seeing a potential Milky Way analogue when it was first forming some 13.2 billion years ago. Here’s what it teaches us about our early cosmic history.
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How did our Universe become the way it is today?

A portion of the dwarf galaxy Wolf–Lundmark–Melotte (WLM) captured by the James Webb Space Telescope’s Near-Infrared Camera. This region showcases some of the stars located within WLM, some ~3 million light-years away, along with many background galaxies of various sizes and distances. The Universe, even when we look within a nearby galaxy, can’t help but reveal itself when we look with JWST’s eyes.
Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, Kristen McQuinn (RU); Image processing: Zolt G. Levay (STScI)

Nearby, modern galaxies only give us a single snapshot.

Euclid perseus cluster
This view of the Perseus cluster of galaxies, from ESA’s Euclid mission, shows over 1000 galaxies all clustered together some 240 million light-years away, with many tens of thousands more identifiable in the background portion of the image. While optically, the image is dominated by the most massive, star-rich galaxies, they are vastly outnumbered by smaller, fainter, low-mass galaxies that are exceedingly difficult to detect, even nearby. Euclid’s capabilities are critical for mapping out the dark Universe.
Credit: ESA/Euclid/Euclid Consortium/NASA, image processing by J.-C. Cuillandre (CEA Paris-Saclay), G. Anselmi, CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO

To understand cosmic history, we must look far away: back in time.

This selection of 55 galaxies from the JWST’s GLASS Early Release Science program spans a variety of ranges in redshift and mass. This helps teach us what shapes galaxies take on over a range of masses and stages in cosmic time/evolution, revealing a number of very massive, very early, yet very evolved-looking galaxies. If we can see them now, they’ll always be visible, a contrast to the myth of the disappearing Universe.
Credit: C. Jacobs, K. Glazebrook et al., arXiv:2208.06516, 2022

JWST has shown us the earliest galaxies ever discovered.

Even from this zoomed-in view of the JADES field, it’s very difficult to pick out the most distant galaxy ever found, JADES-GS-z14-0, by eye. This animation shows its location with a green circle: overlapping with a brighter, bluer, closer galaxy.
Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, B. Robertson (UC Santa Cruz), B. Johnson (CfA), S. Tacchella (Cambridge), P. Cargile (CfA); Animation: E. Siegel

But there’s a problem: it can only see the brightest ones.

JADES-GS-z14-0, in the top inset box, is found behind (and just to the right of) a closer, brighter, bluer galaxy. It was only through the power of spectroscopy with incredible resolution, capable of separating the two sources, that the nature of this record-breakingly distant object could be determined. Its light comes to us from when the Universe was only 285-290 million years old: just 2.1% of its current age. JADES-GS-z14-1, just below it, comes from when the Universe was ~300 million years old. Compared to large, modern-day galaxies, all early galaxies contain a paucity of stars and have irregular, ill-defined shapes.
Credit: S. Carniani et al. (JADES collaboration), arXiv:2405.18485, 2024

These galaxies are curiously abundant so early on.

When the light from not just stars, but also from the central, supermassive black hole is also included, the additional brightness over what’s expected from these early galaxies can finally be explained. The question of why they have the abundances they do, which is still slightly mismatched from theoretical models, still remains.
Credit: K. Chworowsky et al., Astronomical Journal, 2024

But they’re the early analogues of the biggest, brightest galaxies of all.

A cosmic story unfolds in a field of numerous galaxies and bright stars scattered against the dark backdrop of space, reminiscent of a scene from the Euclid mission's observations.
At a level of 36x zoom, Euclid’s first mosaic contains the distant but abundant galaxy cluster Abell 3381, which features a line of bright galaxies similar to Markarian’s chain in the Virgo cluster. The most massive, luminous galaxy in a modern galaxy cluster is analogous to the majority of ultra-distant galaxies spotted by JWST; more modest Milky Way-like analogues are much harder to find.

Credit: ESA/Euclid/Euclid Consortium/NASA, CEA Paris-Saclay; Processing: J.-C. Cuillandre, E. Bertin, G. Anselmi

Milky Way-like galaxies are much fainter — and harder to spot — early on.

milky way galaxies cosmic time
Galaxies comparable to the present-day Milky Way are numerous, but younger galaxies that are Milky Way-like are inherently smaller, bluer, and richer in gas in general than the galaxies we see today. Fewer galaxies have disks and spiral shapes as we look farther back in time. Over time, many smaller galaxies become gravitationally bound together, resulting in mergers, but also in groups and clusters containing large numbers of galaxies overall.
Credit: NASA, ESA, P. van Dokkum (Yale U.), S. Patel (Leiden U.), and the 3-D-HST Team

Only with the natural enhancement of gravitational lensing can early Milky Way analogues be seen.

Nasa image makes universe visible, showing a cluster of galaxies.
These eight very faint, low-mass galaxies would be invisible to even JWST at these great distances under normal circumstances. Only from gravitational lensing’s severe brightness enhancement, an effect of Einstein’s general relativity, can these galaxies be revealed at all. Unlike the more common, brighter galaxies found at great distances by JWST, these smaller but more common objects are closer early analogues of our modern Milky Way.
Credit: H. Atek et al., Nature, 2024

Earlier in 2024, the Cosmic Gems arc was spotted: with only a few million stars total.

Composite image showing galaxy alignment with labeled measurements and color-coded lines for analysis, captured by the JWST. Includes a graph indicating flux levels and a scale bar for reference, offering insights into the cosmic neighborhood of our baby Milky Way.
This image shows the Cosmic Gems arc, a bright and highly magnified early galaxy from just 460 million years after the Big Bang, in a JWST color composite image. The galaxy is resolved into five young star clusters located within just a ~240 light-year span.
Credit: A. Adamo et al., Nature, 2024

Now, the even more detailed Firefly Sparkle galaxy appears in JWST data.

Image of the Firefly Sparkle galaxy and its companions, reminiscent of a baby Milky Way, surrounded by numerous stars and galaxies. The JWST offers a zoomed-in inset highlighting the galaxy and its two companions.
Within the field of galaxy cluster MACS J1423, a few stretched-out arcs can be seen: examples of lensed background galaxies. One such arc corresponds to the Firefly Sparkle galaxy, with ten component star clusters inside of it. Nearby, two other lensed galaxies, only 6500 and 42,000 light-years away, respectively, indicate young proto-galaxies in the process of assembling into a larger, more modern galaxy.
Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Chris Willott (NRC-Canada), Lamiya Mowla (Wellesley College), Kartheik Iyer (Columbia)

Inside, ten independent star clusters are bursting into existence right now.

Composite image of galaxies and cosmic structures with various colored filters applied, akin to how the JWST captures the infantile beauty of our universe. Labeled regions are highlighted with numbered indicators and overlaid contour lines, offering a glimpse into a baby Milky Way's grandeur.
Shown along with contoured lines that indicate lensing magnification within the cluster, the Firefly Sparkle galaxy is shown in a central box with two nearby companion galaxies also highlighted. Within the arc, ten individual bright spots corresponding to star clusters of 100,000+ solar masses apiece appear.
Credit: L. Mowla et al., Nature, 2024

Their stars range from 2-to-8 million years old: incredibly young in a ~600 million year old Universe.

Diagram showing two graphs: (a) a line graph with a declining black line and scattered data points, (b) a scatter plot with various colored clusters and annotations, illustrating star formation data captured by JWST in the baby Milky Way.
Compared to the formation history that’s been reconstructed for the modern Milky Way (black points/line), the Firefly Sparkle galaxy represents the earliest, lowest-mass analogue ever discovered. Within it, ten newly formed star clusters dominate its light output, showcasing the effectiveness of bursty star-formation. The stellar densities here are large, but much smaller than those inferred for the galaxy found in the Cosmic Gems arc, discovered earlier in 2024.
Credit: L. Mowla et al., Nature, 2024

Stellar densities exceed even those of modern globular clusters.

This sparkle-rich lensed galaxy located behind galaxy cluster SMACS 0723, known as the Sparkler, just happens to be catching this galaxy in the act of forming a second population of stars within some of its massive globular clusters. The bright spots within the unrelated Firefly Sparkle galaxy are likely highlighting a similar example of bursty star-formation.

Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI; Annotation: E. Siegel

Multiple other galaxies exist within ~100,000 light-years.

A series of scientific images and graphs showcasing star formation rates and density, labeled Firefly Sparkle, BF, and NBF, with marked features and numerical indicators, evokes the wonder of a JWST glimpse into the baby Milky Way.
The Firefly Sparkle galaxy, alongside its two companions (BF and NBF), indicates a history of bursty star-formation, and points to a formation history of the first stars of all within the first 50-150 million years of cosmic history.
Credit: L. Mowla et al., Nature, 2024

They’ll all someday merge to form a grown-up, modern, Milky Way-like galaxy.

Small, early, baby galaxies such as this provide the majority (80+%) of ultraviolet photons for reionizing the Universe.

A stylized illustration of the timeline of the universe, depicting major events from the big bang through the cosmic dark ages to the modern era.
For the first ~550 million years of the Universe, neutral, light-blocking atoms persist in the space between galaxies, continuing what’s known as the cosmic dark ages. While that material persists, starlight is largely absorbed, and cannot penetrate through this “fog.” Once the last of that neutral matter becomes reionized, largely due to the ultraviolet light emitted from the large number of small star clusters and early galaxies, starlight can propagate freely through the Universe, marking the end of the reionization epoch.

Credit: M. Alvarez, R. Kaehler, and T. Abel / chart by Big Think

Mostly Mute Monday tells an astronomical story in images, visuals, and no more than 200 words.

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