<p>Astronomers have discovered a 13-billion-year-old galaxy cluster that is the earliest ever observed, according to a paper released Friday, a finding that may hold clues about how the universe developed.</p>.<p>Such an early-stage cluster -- called a protocluster -- is "not easy to find", Yuichi Harikane, a researcher at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan who led the international team, said in a press release.</p>.<p>"A protocluster is a rare and special system with an extremely high density," Harikane said, adding that the researchers used the wide viewing field of the Subaru telescope in Hawaii to "map a large area of the sky" in their search.</p>.<p>The discovery of the protocluster, a collection of 12 galaxies, suggests that large cosmic structures were present in the very early stages of the universe, which scientists believe was born 13.8 billion years ago.</p>.<p>One of the 12 galaxies is known as Himiko, a giant gas cloud found in 2009 by using the same telescope.</p>.<p>"It is reasonable to find a protocluster near a massive object, such as Himiko. However, we're surprised to see that Himiko was located... on the edge 500 million light-years away from the center," the paper's co-author Masami Ouchi said.</p>.<p>"It is still not understood why Himiko is not located in the centre," he said.</p>.<p>"These results will be key for understanding the relationship between clusters and massive galaxies."</p>.<p>The team included scientists from Imperial College London and the study is published in Friday's Astrophysical Journal.</p>
<p>Astronomers have discovered a 13-billion-year-old galaxy cluster that is the earliest ever observed, according to a paper released Friday, a finding that may hold clues about how the universe developed.</p>.<p>Such an early-stage cluster -- called a protocluster -- is "not easy to find", Yuichi Harikane, a researcher at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan who led the international team, said in a press release.</p>.<p>"A protocluster is a rare and special system with an extremely high density," Harikane said, adding that the researchers used the wide viewing field of the Subaru telescope in Hawaii to "map a large area of the sky" in their search.</p>.<p>The discovery of the protocluster, a collection of 12 galaxies, suggests that large cosmic structures were present in the very early stages of the universe, which scientists believe was born 13.8 billion years ago.</p>.<p>One of the 12 galaxies is known as Himiko, a giant gas cloud found in 2009 by using the same telescope.</p>.<p>"It is reasonable to find a protocluster near a massive object, such as Himiko. However, we're surprised to see that Himiko was located... on the edge 500 million light-years away from the center," the paper's co-author Masami Ouchi said.</p>.<p>"It is still not understood why Himiko is not located in the centre," he said.</p>.<p>"These results will be key for understanding the relationship between clusters and massive galaxies."</p>.<p>The team included scientists from Imperial College London and the study is published in Friday's Astrophysical Journal.</p>