{
    "id": 13511,
    "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/13511/",
    "page_type": "Produced Video",
    "title": "Distant Galaxy Group Caught Driving Ancient Cosmic Makeover",
    "description": "This animation shows EGS77’s place in cosmic history, flies to the galaxies, and illustrates how ultraviolet light from their stars create bubbles of ionized hydrogen around them.Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight CenterWatch this video on the NASA.gov Video YouTube channel. || reionization_animation_with_label_122019.00001_print.jpg (1024x576) [69.7 KB] || reionization_animation_with_label_122019.mp4 (1920x1080) [83.2 MB] || reionization_animation_with_label_122019.webm (1920x1080) [4.0 MB] || reionization_animation_with_label_122019.mov (1920x1080) [433.6 MB] || ",
    "release_date": "2020-01-05T15:00:00-05:00",
    "update_date": "2023-05-03T13:45:18.292726-04:00",
    "main_image": {
        "id": 388473,
        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/bubbles_hi_res_still_122019_print.jpg",
        "filename": "bubbles_hi_res_still_122019_print.jpg",
        "media_type": "Image",
        "alt_text": "This illustration of the EGS77 galaxy group shows the galaxies surrounded by overlapping bubbles of hydrogen ionized by ultraviolet light from their stars. By transforming light-quenching hydrogen atoms to ionized gas, UV starlight is thought to have formed such bubbles throughout the early universe, gradually transitioning it from opaque to completely transparent. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center",
        "width": 1024,
        "height": 576,
        "pixels": 589824
    },
    "main_video": null,
    "main_credits": {
        "Produced by": [
            {
                "name": "Chris Smith",
                "employer": "USRA"
            }
        ],
        "Visualizations by": [
            {
                "name": "Chris Smith",
                "employer": "USRA"
            }
        ],
        "Written by": [
            {
                "name": "Francis Reddy",
                "employer": "University of Maryland College Park"
            }
        ]
    },
    "progress": "Complete",
    "media_groups": [
        {
            "id": 321236,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/13511/#media_group_321236",
            "widget": "Video player",
            "title": "",
            "caption": "",
            "description": "This animation shows EGS77’s place in cosmic history, flies to the galaxies, and illustrates how ultraviolet light from their stars create bubbles of ionized hydrogen around them.<p><p>Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center<p><p><b>Watch this video on the <a href=\"https://youtu.be/ShHiIot8icc\" target=\"_blank\" >NASA.gov Video YouTube channel</a>.</b><p>",
            "items": [
                {
                    "id": 231842,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388462,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/reionization_animation_with_label_122019.00001_print.jpg",
                        "filename": "reionization_animation_with_label_122019.00001_print.jpg",
                        "media_type": "Image",
                        "alt_text": "This animation shows EGS77’s place in cosmic history, flies to the galaxies, and illustrates how ultraviolet light from their stars create bubbles of ionized hydrogen around them.Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight CenterWatch this video on the NASA.gov Video YouTube channel.",
                        "width": 1024,
                        "height": 576,
                        "pixels": 589824
                    }
                },
                {
                    "id": 231840,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388460,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/reionization_animation_with_label_122019.mov",
                        "filename": "reionization_animation_with_label_122019.mov",
                        "media_type": "Movie",
                        "alt_text": "This animation shows EGS77’s place in cosmic history, flies to the galaxies, and illustrates how ultraviolet light from their stars create bubbles of ionized hydrogen around them.Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight CenterWatch this video on the NASA.gov Video YouTube channel.",
                        "width": 1920,
                        "height": 1080,
                        "pixels": 2073600
                    }
                },
                {
                    "id": 231841,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388461,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/reionization_animation_with_label_122019.mp4",
                        "filename": "reionization_animation_with_label_122019.mp4",
                        "media_type": "Movie",
                        "alt_text": "This animation shows EGS77’s place in cosmic history, flies to the galaxies, and illustrates how ultraviolet light from their stars create bubbles of ionized hydrogen around them.Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight CenterWatch this video on the NASA.gov Video YouTube channel.",
                        "width": 1920,
                        "height": 1080,
                        "pixels": 2073600
                    }
                },
                {
                    "id": 231843,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388463,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/reionization_animation_with_label_122019.webm",
                        "filename": "reionization_animation_with_label_122019.webm",
                        "media_type": "Movie",
                        "alt_text": "This animation shows EGS77’s place in cosmic history, flies to the galaxies, and illustrates how ultraviolet light from their stars create bubbles of ionized hydrogen around them.Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight CenterWatch this video on the NASA.gov Video YouTube channel.",
                        "width": 1920,
                        "height": 1080,
                        "pixels": 2073600
                    }
                }
            ],
            "extra_data": {}
        },
        {
            "id": 321235,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/13511/#media_group_321235",
            "widget": "Basic text with HTML",
            "title": "",
            "caption": "",
            "description": "An international team of astronomers has found the farthest galaxy group identified to date. Called EGS77, the trio of galaxies dates to a time when the universe was only 680 million years old, or less than 5% of its current age of 13.8 billion years. <br><br>More significantly, observations show the galaxies are participants in a sweeping cosmic makeover called reionization. The era began when light from the first stars changed the nature of hydrogen throughout the universe in a manner akin to a frozen lake melting in the spring. This transformed the dark, light-quenching early cosmos into the one we see around us today.<br><br>The young universe was filled with hydrogen atoms, which so attenuate ultraviolet light that they block our view of early galaxies. EGS77 is the first galaxy group caught in the act of clearing out this cosmic fog.<br><br>While more distant individual galaxies have been observed, EGS77 is the farthest galaxy group to date showing the specific wavelengths of far-ultraviolet light revealed by reionization. This emission, called Lyman alpha light, is prominent in all members of EGS77.<br><br>In its earliest phase, the universe was a glowing plasma of particles, including electrons, protons, atomic nuclei, and light. Atoms could not yet exist. The universe was in an ionized state, similar to the gas inside a lighted neon sign or fluorescent tube.<br><br>After the universe expanded and cooled for about 380,000 years, electrons and protons combined into the first atoms &mdash; more than 90% of them hydrogen. Hundreds of millions of years later, this gas formed the first stars and galaxies. But the very presence of this abundant gas poses challenges for spotting galaxies in the early universe.  <br><br>Hydrogen atoms readily absorb and quickly re-emit far-ultraviolet light known as Lyman alpha emission, which has a wavelength of 121.6 nanometers. When the first stars formed, some of the light they produced matched this wavelength. Because Lyman alpha light easily interacted with hydrogen atoms, it couldn’t travel far before the gas scattered it in random directions. <br><br>Intense light from galaxies can ionize the surrounding hydrogen gas, forming bubbles that allow starlight to travel freely. EGS77 has formed a large bubble that allows its light to travel to Earth without much attenuation. Eventually, bubbles like these grew around all galaxies and filled intergalactic space, reionizing the universe and clearing the way for light to travel across the cosmos.<br><br>Because the universe is expanding, Lyman alpha light from EGS77 has been stretched out during its travels, so astronomers actually detect it at near-infrared wavelengths. We can’t see these galaxies in visible light now because that light started out at shorter wavelengths than Lyman alpha and was scattered by the fog of hydrogen atoms.",
            "items": [],
            "extra_data": {}
        },
        {
            "id": 321237,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/13511/#media_group_321237",
            "widget": "Video player",
            "title": "",
            "caption": "",
            "description": "Unlabeled version of the above video.<p><p>Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center</p><p>",
            "items": [
                {
                    "id": 231846,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388466,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/reionization_animation_no_label_122019.00360_print.jpg",
                        "filename": "reionization_animation_no_label_122019.00360_print.jpg",
                        "media_type": "Image",
                        "alt_text": "Unlabeled version of the above video.Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center",
                        "width": 1024,
                        "height": 576,
                        "pixels": 589824
                    }
                },
                {
                    "id": 231844,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388464,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/reionization_animation_no_label_122019.mov",
                        "filename": "reionization_animation_no_label_122019.mov",
                        "media_type": "Movie",
                        "alt_text": "Unlabeled version of the above video.Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center",
                        "width": 1920,
                        "height": 1080,
                        "pixels": 2073600
                    }
                },
                {
                    "id": 231845,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388465,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/reionization_animation_no_label_122019.mp4",
                        "filename": "reionization_animation_no_label_122019.mp4",
                        "media_type": "Movie",
                        "alt_text": "Unlabeled version of the above video.Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center",
                        "width": 1920,
                        "height": 1080,
                        "pixels": 2073600
                    }
                },
                {
                    "id": 231847,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388467,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/reionization_animation_no_label_122019.webm",
                        "filename": "reionization_animation_no_label_122019.webm",
                        "media_type": "Movie",
                        "alt_text": "Unlabeled version of the above video.Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center",
                        "width": 1920,
                        "height": 1080,
                        "pixels": 2073600
                    }
                }
            ],
            "extra_data": {}
        },
        {
            "id": 321238,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/13511/#media_group_321238",
            "widget": "Single image",
            "title": "",
            "caption": "",
            "description": "Unlabeled version. This composite of archival Hubble Space Telescope visible and near-infrared images shows a part of the Extended Groth Strip, a well-studied area located between the constellations Ursa Major and Boötes, that includes the galaxy group EGS77 (lower left). The image is 5.4 arcminutes across. <p><p>Credit: NASA, ESA, and V. Tilvi (ASU)<p>",
            "items": [
                {
                    "id": 231848,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388468,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/HST_IRVis_EGS77_field.jpg",
                        "filename": "HST_IRVis_EGS77_field.jpg",
                        "media_type": "Image",
                        "alt_text": "Unlabeled version. This composite of archival Hubble Space Telescope visible and near-infrared images shows a part of the Extended Groth Strip, a well-studied area located between the constellations Ursa Major and Boötes, that includes the galaxy group EGS77 (lower left). The image is 5.4 arcminutes across. Credit: NASA, ESA, and V. Tilvi (ASU)",
                        "width": 5322,
                        "height": 3483,
                        "pixels": 18536526
                    }
                }
            ],
            "extra_data": {}
        },
        {
            "id": 321239,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/13511/#media_group_321239",
            "widget": "Single image",
            "title": "",
            "caption": "",
            "description": "Labeled version. This composite of archival Hubble Space Telescope visible and near-infrared images shows a part of the Extended Groth Strip, a well-studied area located between the constellations Ursa Major and Boötes. The three galaxies of the EGS77 galaxy group, highlighted by green circles at lower left, lie at a redshift of 7.7, which means we’re seeing the galaxies as they were when the universe was just 680 million years old. The image is 5.4 arcminutes across. <p><p>Credit: NASA, ESA, and V. Tilvi (ASU)<p>",
            "items": [
                {
                    "id": 231849,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388469,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/HST_IRVis_EGS77_field_circles.jpg",
                        "filename": "HST_IRVis_EGS77_field_circles.jpg",
                        "media_type": "Image",
                        "alt_text": "Labeled version. This composite of archival Hubble Space Telescope visible and near-infrared images shows a part of the Extended Groth Strip, a well-studied area located between the constellations Ursa Major and Boötes. The three galaxies of the EGS77 galaxy group, highlighted by green circles at lower left, lie at a redshift of 7.7, which means we’re seeing the galaxies as they were when the universe was just 680 million years old. The image is 5.4 arcminutes across. Credit: NASA, ESA, and V. Tilvi (ASU)",
                        "width": 5322,
                        "height": 3483,
                        "pixels": 18536526
                    }
                }
            ],
            "extra_data": {}
        },
        {
            "id": 321240,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/13511/#media_group_321240",
            "widget": "Single image",
            "title": "",
            "caption": "",
            "description": "GIF version. This composite of archival Hubble Space Telescope visible and near-infrared images shows a part of the Extended Groth Strip, a well-studied area located between the constellations Ursa Major and Boötes. The three galaxies of the EGS77 galaxy group, highlighted by the green circles, lie at a redshift of 7.7, which means we’re seeing the galaxies as they were when the universe was just 680 million years old. The image is 3.2 arcminutes across, or about one-tenth the apparent size of a full Moon. <p><p>Credit: NASA, ESA, and V. Tilvi (ASU)<p>",
            "items": [
                {
                    "id": 231850,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388470,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/HST_EGS77_2.gif",
                        "filename": "HST_EGS77_2.gif",
                        "media_type": "Image",
                        "alt_text": "GIF version. This composite of archival Hubble Space Telescope visible and near-infrared images shows a part of the Extended Groth Strip, a well-studied area located between the constellations Ursa Major and Boötes. The three galaxies of the EGS77 galaxy group, highlighted by the green circles, lie at a redshift of 7.7, which means we’re seeing the galaxies as they were when the universe was just 680 million years old. The image is 3.2 arcminutes across, or about one-tenth the apparent size of a full Moon. Credit: NASA, ESA, and V. Tilvi (ASU)",
                        "width": 1042,
                        "height": 382,
                        "pixels": 398044
                    }
                }
            ],
            "extra_data": {}
        },
        {
            "id": 321241,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/13511/#media_group_321241",
            "widget": "Single image",
            "title": "",
            "caption": "",
            "description": "Inset: This illustration of the EGS77 galaxy group shows the galaxies surrounded by overlapping bubbles of ionized hydrogen. By transforming light-quenching hydrogen atoms to ionized gas, ultraviolet starlight is thought to have formed such bubbles throughout the early universe, gradually transitioning it from opaque to completely transparent. Background: This composite of archival Hubble Space Telescope visible and near-infrared images includes the three galaxies of EGS77 (green circles). <p><p>Credit: NASA, ESA, and V. Tilvi (ASU)",
            "items": [
                {
                    "id": 231851,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388471,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/EGS77_HST_illustration_composite.jpg",
                        "filename": "EGS77_HST_illustration_composite.jpg",
                        "media_type": "Image",
                        "alt_text": "Inset: This illustration of the EGS77 galaxy group shows the galaxies surrounded by overlapping bubbles of ionized hydrogen. By transforming light-quenching hydrogen atoms to ionized gas, ultraviolet starlight is thought to have formed such bubbles throughout the early universe, gradually transitioning it from opaque to completely transparent. Background: This composite of archival Hubble Space Telescope visible and near-infrared images includes the three galaxies of EGS77 (green circles). Credit: NASA, ESA, and V. Tilvi (ASU)",
                        "width": 4243,
                        "height": 2766,
                        "pixels": 11736138
                    }
                }
            ],
            "extra_data": {}
        },
        {
            "id": 321242,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/13511/#media_group_321242",
            "widget": "Single image",
            "title": "",
            "caption": "",
            "description": "This illustration of the EGS77 galaxy group shows the galaxies surrounded by overlapping bubbles of hydrogen ionized by ultraviolet light from their stars. By transforming light-quenching hydrogen atoms to ionized gas, UV starlight is thought to have formed such bubbles throughout the early universe, gradually transitioning it from opaque to completely transparent. <p><p>Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center",
            "items": [
                {
                    "id": 231853,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388473,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/bubbles_hi_res_still_122019_print.jpg",
                        "filename": "bubbles_hi_res_still_122019_print.jpg",
                        "media_type": "Image",
                        "alt_text": "This illustration of the EGS77 galaxy group shows the galaxies surrounded by overlapping bubbles of hydrogen ionized by ultraviolet light from their stars. By transforming light-quenching hydrogen atoms to ionized gas, UV starlight is thought to have formed such bubbles throughout the early universe, gradually transitioning it from opaque to completely transparent. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center",
                        "width": 1024,
                        "height": 576,
                        "pixels": 589824
                    }
                },
                {
                    "id": 231852,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388472,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/bubbles_hi_res_still_122019.png",
                        "filename": "bubbles_hi_res_still_122019.png",
                        "media_type": "Image",
                        "alt_text": "This illustration of the EGS77 galaxy group shows the galaxies surrounded by overlapping bubbles of hydrogen ionized by ultraviolet light from their stars. By transforming light-quenching hydrogen atoms to ionized gas, UV starlight is thought to have formed such bubbles throughout the early universe, gradually transitioning it from opaque to completely transparent. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center",
                        "width": 3840,
                        "height": 2160,
                        "pixels": 8294400
                    }
                },
                {
                    "id": 231854,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388474,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/bubbles_hi_res_still_122019_searchweb.png",
                        "filename": "bubbles_hi_res_still_122019_searchweb.png",
                        "media_type": "Image",
                        "alt_text": "This illustration of the EGS77 galaxy group shows the galaxies surrounded by overlapping bubbles of hydrogen ionized by ultraviolet light from their stars. By transforming light-quenching hydrogen atoms to ionized gas, UV starlight is thought to have formed such bubbles throughout the early universe, gradually transitioning it from opaque to completely transparent. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center",
                        "width": 320,
                        "height": 180,
                        "pixels": 57600
                    }
                },
                {
                    "id": 231855,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388475,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/bubbles_hi_res_still_122019_thm.png",
                        "filename": "bubbles_hi_res_still_122019_thm.png",
                        "media_type": "Image",
                        "alt_text": "This illustration of the EGS77 galaxy group shows the galaxies surrounded by overlapping bubbles of hydrogen ionized by ultraviolet light from their stars. By transforming light-quenching hydrogen atoms to ionized gas, UV starlight is thought to have formed such bubbles throughout the early universe, gradually transitioning it from opaque to completely transparent. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center",
                        "width": 80,
                        "height": 40,
                        "pixels": 3200
                    }
                }
            ],
            "extra_data": {}
        },
        {
            "id": 321243,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/13511/#media_group_321243",
            "widget": "Single image",
            "title": "",
            "caption": "",
            "description": "Labeled version. This illustration shows EGS77’s place in the history of the universe. We're seeing the galaxies as they were just 680 million years after the big bang (far left). The blue-green surface shows the cosmic microwave background, the light resulting from the formation of the first atoms 380,000 years after the universe was born.<p><p>Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center",
            "items": [
                {
                    "id": 231857,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388477,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/diagram_still_hi_res_with_group_label_122019_print.jpg",
                        "filename": "diagram_still_hi_res_with_group_label_122019_print.jpg",
                        "media_type": "Image",
                        "alt_text": "Labeled version. This illustration shows EGS77’s place in the history of the universe. We're seeing the galaxies as they were just 680 million years after the big bang (far left). The blue-green surface shows the cosmic microwave background, the light resulting from the formation of the first atoms 380,000 years after the universe was born.Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center",
                        "width": 1024,
                        "height": 576,
                        "pixels": 589824
                    }
                },
                {
                    "id": 231856,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388476,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/diagram_still_hi_res_with_group_label_122019.png",
                        "filename": "diagram_still_hi_res_with_group_label_122019.png",
                        "media_type": "Image",
                        "alt_text": "Labeled version. This illustration shows EGS77’s place in the history of the universe. We're seeing the galaxies as they were just 680 million years after the big bang (far left). The blue-green surface shows the cosmic microwave background, the light resulting from the formation of the first atoms 380,000 years after the universe was born.Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center",
                        "width": 3840,
                        "height": 2160,
                        "pixels": 8294400
                    }
                }
            ],
            "extra_data": {}
        },
        {
            "id": 321244,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/13511/#media_group_321244",
            "widget": "Single image",
            "title": "",
            "caption": "",
            "description": "Unlabeled version of the above illustration. <p><p>Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center",
            "items": [
                {
                    "id": 231859,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388479,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/diagram_still_hi_res_122019_print.jpg",
                        "filename": "diagram_still_hi_res_122019_print.jpg",
                        "media_type": "Image",
                        "alt_text": "Unlabeled version of the above illustration. Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center",
                        "width": 1024,
                        "height": 576,
                        "pixels": 589824
                    }
                },
                {
                    "id": 231858,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388478,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/diagram_still_hi_res_122019.png",
                        "filename": "diagram_still_hi_res_122019.png",
                        "media_type": "Image",
                        "alt_text": "Unlabeled version of the above illustration. Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center",
                        "width": 3840,
                        "height": 2160,
                        "pixels": 8294400
                    }
                }
            ],
            "extra_data": {}
        },
        {
            "id": 321245,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/13511/#media_group_321245",
            "widget": "Video player",
            "title": "",
            "caption": "",
            "description": "This visualization shows how ultraviolet light from the first stars and galaxies gradually transformed the universe. Hydrogen atoms, also called neutral hydrogen, readily scatter UV light, preventing it from traveling very far from its sources. Gradually,  intense UV light from stars and galaxies split apart the hydrogen atoms, creating expanding bubbles of ionized gas. As these bubbles grew and overlapped, the cosmic fog lifted. Astronomers call this process reionization. Here, regions already ionized are blue and translucent, areas undergoing ionization are red and white, and regions of neutral gas are dark and opaque.<p><p>Credit: M. Alvarez, R. Kaehler and T. Abel (2009)",
            "items": [
                {
                    "id": 231862,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388482,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/eso1041d.02000_print.jpg",
                        "filename": "eso1041d.02000_print.jpg",
                        "media_type": "Image",
                        "alt_text": "This visualization shows how ultraviolet light from the first stars and galaxies gradually transformed the universe. Hydrogen atoms, also called neutral hydrogen, readily scatter UV light, preventing it from traveling very far from its sources. Gradually,  intense UV light from stars and galaxies split apart the hydrogen atoms, creating expanding bubbles of ionized gas. As these bubbles grew and overlapped, the cosmic fog lifted. Astronomers call this process reionization. Here, regions already ionized are blue and translucent, areas undergoing ionization are red and white, and regions of neutral gas are dark and opaque.Credit: M. Alvarez, R. Kaehler and T. Abel (2009)",
                        "width": 1024,
                        "height": 576,
                        "pixels": 589824
                    }
                },
                {
                    "id": 231860,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388480,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/eso1041d.mp4",
                        "filename": "eso1041d.mp4",
                        "media_type": "Movie",
                        "alt_text": "This visualization shows how ultraviolet light from the first stars and galaxies gradually transformed the universe. Hydrogen atoms, also called neutral hydrogen, readily scatter UV light, preventing it from traveling very far from its sources. Gradually,  intense UV light from stars and galaxies split apart the hydrogen atoms, creating expanding bubbles of ionized gas. As these bubbles grew and overlapped, the cosmic fog lifted. Astronomers call this process reionization. Here, regions already ionized are blue and translucent, areas undergoing ionization are red and white, and regions of neutral gas are dark and opaque.Credit: M. Alvarez, R. Kaehler and T. Abel (2009)",
                        "width": 1920,
                        "height": 1080,
                        "pixels": 2073600
                    }
                },
                {
                    "id": 231861,
                    "type": "media",
                    "extra_data": null,
                    "title": null,
                    "caption": null,
                    "instance": {
                        "id": 388481,
                        "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a013500/a013511/eso1041d.webm",
                        "filename": "eso1041d.webm",
                        "media_type": "Movie",
                        "alt_text": "This visualization shows how ultraviolet light from the first stars and galaxies gradually transformed the universe. Hydrogen atoms, also called neutral hydrogen, readily scatter UV light, preventing it from traveling very far from its sources. Gradually,  intense UV light from stars and galaxies split apart the hydrogen atoms, creating expanding bubbles of ionized gas. As these bubbles grew and overlapped, the cosmic fog lifted. Astronomers call this process reionization. Here, regions already ionized are blue and translucent, areas undergoing ionization are red and white, and regions of neutral gas are dark and opaque.Credit: M. Alvarez, R. Kaehler and T. Abel (2009)",
                        "width": 1920,
                        "height": 1080,
                        "pixels": 2073600
                    }
                }
            ],
            "extra_data": {}
        }
    ],
    "studio": "gms",
    "funding_sources": [
        "PAO"
    ],
    "credits": [
        {
            "role": "Producer",
            "people": [
                {
                    "name": "Chris Smith",
                    "employer": "USRA"
                }
            ]
        },
        {
            "role": "Animator",
            "people": [
                {
                    "name": "Chris Smith",
                    "employer": "USRA"
                }
            ]
        },
        {
            "role": "Science writer",
            "people": [
                {
                    "name": "Francis Reddy",
                    "employer": "University of Maryland College Park"
                }
            ]
        }
    ],
    "missions": [
        "Hubble"
    ],
    "series": [
        "Astrophysics Animations",
        "Astrophysics Stills"
    ],
    "tapes": [],
    "papers": [],
    "datasets": [],
    "nasa_science_categories": [
        "Universe"
    ],
    "keywords": [
        "Ast",
        "Astrophysics",
        "Bubble",
        "Galaxy",
        "Reionization",
        "Space",
        "Universe"
    ],
    "recommended_pages": [],
    "related": [
        {
            "id": 14857,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/14857/",
            "page_type": "Produced Video",
            "title": "NASA’s Webb Reveals Galaxy Population Driving Cosmic Renovation",
            "description": "Symbols mark the locations of young, low-mass galaxies bursting with new stars when the universe was about 800 million years old. Using a filter sensitive to such galaxies, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope imaged them with the help of a natural gravitational lens created by the massive galaxy cluster Abell 2744. In all, 83 young galaxies were found, but only the 20 shown here (white diamonds) were selected for deeper study. The inset zooms into one of the galaxies. Credit: NASA/ESA/CSA/Bezanson et al. 2024 and Wold et al. 2025Alt text: Animation showing the locations of young, low-mass, starburst galaxies around galaxy cluster Abell 2744.Image description:White and yellow galaxies of various sizes and shapes appear against the blackness of space. Two bright stars in our own galaxy display prominent six-spike diffraction patterns with bluish rays, visible at center left and lower left. Then 20 white diamonds sweep across the image. One diamond enlarges to reveal an image of a young, low-mass, star-forming galaxy. It looks like a green oval against a red and green checked background. The enlarged image then shrinks back, and the diamonds sweep away. The sequence loops. || Pandora_stamp_60pct.gif (600x600) [961.0 KB] || ",
            "release_date": "2025-06-11T14:10:00-04:00",
            "update_date": "2025-06-10T12:51:33.566679-04:00",
            "main_image": {
                "id": 1156272,
                "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a014800/a014857/41028_print.jpg",
                "filename": "41028_print.jpg",
                "media_type": "Image",
                "alt_text": "One of the most interesting galaxies of the study, dubbed 41028 (the green oval at center), has an estimated stellar mass of just 2 million Suns — comparable to the masses of the largest star clusters in our own Milky Way galaxy. Credit: NASA/ESA/CSA/Bezanson et al. 2024 and Wold et al. 2025Alt text: Enlarged view of a single young starburst galaxy.Image description: A pixelated green oval extending from upper left to lower right sits in the middle of a red and green checked background. A large white blob is visible at center right. ",
                "width": 1024,
                "height": 1024,
                "pixels": 1048576
            }
        }
    ],
    "sources": [],
    "products": [],
    "newer_versions": [],
    "older_versions": [],
    "alternate_versions": []
}