NewsBulukumba – Humans raise their heads to the sky with the naked eye to reach the most distant and oldest stars represented by the James Webb Space Telescope.
James Webb has found evidence of supermassive stars lurking at the dawn of the universe. These stars, which are up to 10,000 times the mass of the Sun, were born just 440 million years after the Big Bang.
Their discovery could help scientists understand how our universe was first seeded with heavy elements.
Also Read: A cosmic tour through photos taken by NASA’s James Webb telescope
The Webb telescope is the most powerful space telescope ever built. It’s designed to see through dust and gas, which makes it ideal for studying the early universe.
Launch Live Science on Saturday, May 20, 2023, in its first observations, the telescope has found evidence of a supermassive star in a galaxy called GN-z11.
This galaxy is the most distant that has ever been seen, and lies only 440 million years after the Big Bang.
Also Read: The James Webb Space Telescope is stalking the Alien world in the TRAPPIST 1 System solar system
2023-05-20 09:25:46
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