ON
← Back to feed
James Webb's discovery brings scientists closer to solving one of the universe's greatest mysteries: they detected a strange object
CO🔬 Science19 days ago

James Webb's discovery brings scientists closer to solving one of the universe's greatest mysteries: they detected a strange object

The James Webb Space Telescope has provided scientists with what they consider the strongest evidence so far regarding the possible existence of stars associated with black holes, a hypothesis that could help explain some of the most mysterious objects in the early universe. Since the discovery of 'small red dots' (LRDs) by the James Webb in 2022, astronomers have tried to decipher the nature of these mysterious light sources observed just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang. A detailed analysis of one of these objects, named GLIMPSE-17775, appears to provide key answers.

1 reports

Semana logoSemanaIndependentCenter19 days ago
James Webb's discovery brings scientists closer to solving one of the universe's greatest mysteries: they detected a strange object

The James Webb Space Telescope has provided scientists with what they consider the strongest evidence so far regarding the possible existence of stars associated with black holes, a hypothesis that could help explain some of the most mysterious objects in the early universe. Since the discovery of 'small red dots' (LRDs) by the James Webb in 2022, astronomers have tried to decipher the nature of these mysterious light sources observed just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang. A detailed analysis of one of these objects, named GLIMPSE-17775, appears to provide key answers.

Bias read (Center): The article discusses scientific findings related to the James Webb Space Telescope and does not present any political stance or biased framing. It focuses on the research and discoveries made by scientists without leaning towards any particular ideological perspective.

Keep the news honest.

ObjectiveNews is reader-funded and ad-free — we show you the bias instead of hiding it. Support independent journalism for €5/month.

Become a Supporter

Related stories