Loading…
The most distant objects in the universe have various mysteries. DOC’s photo
It was recently discovered by a group of Harvard astronomers and also by the Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
The universe always holds many unexpected surprises, with the discovery of this object certainly setting a record for the most distant astronomical object ever seen.
Read also: Scientists find the most distant galaxy in the universe, that’s what it looks like
The object contains a collection of stars named HD1. The star cluster expanded and became the growing plume of dust and gas that became their cosmic destiny.
The discovery of HD1 was observed for a long time, reaching 1,200 hours using the Subaru, Vista, Infrared telescopes from England and also the Spitzer Space Telescope.
In their observations, they assumed that “The first galaxies formed about a hundred million years ago after the Big Bang. They (HD1) are one-millionth the mass of the distant and denser Milky Way,” said the researcher and astrophysicist from Harvard Avi Loeb as quoted by Live Science.
Read also: Astronomers detect the furthest quasar at 13 billion light-years away
Furthermore, the observations also show that HD1 appears to have a very rapid growth rate of around 100 stars each year.
The resulting star also has a brighter light and is also more massive and hotter in temperature than all the stars that have been discovered by the researchers.