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Using a super-sensitive camera/spectrometer on the Herschel Space Observatory, astronomers, including a UC Irvine team led by Asantha Cooray, have mapped the skies as they appeared 10 billion years ago.
The UCI scientists found that these glistening galaxies preferentially occupy regions of the universe containing more dark matter and that collisions probably caused the abundant star production.
Cooray, associate professor and Chancellor's Fellow in physics and astronomy, said: "Thanks to the superb resolution and sensitivity of the SPIRE [Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver] instrument on Herschel, we managed to map in detail the spatial distribution of massively star-forming galaxies in the early universe.
...these glistening galaxies preferentially occupy regions of the universe containing more dark matter and that collisions probably caused the abundant star production.
I think the writer was waxing poetic.