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  1. Article

    Author Correction: A massive core for a cluster of galaxies at a redshift of 4.3

    Change history: In this Letter, the Acknowledgements section should have included the following sentence: “The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the National Science Foundation operated und...

    T. B. Miller, S. C. Chapman, M. Aravena, M. L. N. Ashby, C. C. Hayward in Nature (2018)

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    Article

    A massive core for a cluster of galaxies at a redshift of 4.3

    Massive galaxy clusters have been found that date to times as early as three billion years after the Big Bang, containing stars that formed at even earlier epochs13. The high-redshift progenitors of these galaxy...

    T. B. Miller, S. C. Chapman, M. Aravena, M. L. N. Ashby, C. C. Hayward in Nature (2018)

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    Article

    Galaxy growth in a massive halo in the first billion years of cosmic history

    Two extremely massive galaxies are seen 800 million years after the Big Bang, showing the rapid growth of early structure and marking the most massive halo known in that era.

    D. P. Marrone, J. S. Spilker, C. C. Hayward, J. D. Vieira, M. Aravena in Nature (2018)

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    Article

    Dusty starburst galaxies in the early Universe as revealed by gravitational lensing

    A spectroscopic redshift survey of extraordinarily bright millimetre-wave-selected sources of carbon monoxide line emission — originating from star-forming molecular gas — shows that at least ten of these sour...

    J. D. Vieira, D. P. Marrone, S. C. Chapman, C. De Breuck, Y. D. Hezaveh, A. Weiβ in Nature (2013)

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    Article

    A massive, cooling-flow-induced starburst in the core of a luminous cluster of galaxies

    X-ray, optical and infrared observations reveal a very high rate of star formation in the core of an extremely luminous galaxy cluster; this starburst seems to be triggered by a cooling flow of the dense intra...

    M. McDonald, M. Bayliss, B. A. Benson, R. J. Foley, J. Ruel, P. Sullivan in Nature (2012)