James Webb discovers the beginnings of the cosmic network with 3 million light years of long dark matter
James Webb discovers the beginnings of the cosmic network with 3 million light years of long dark matter
New space telescope James Webb discovered beginnings of the cosmic network
The James Webb space telescope has achieved another breakthrough. With a budget of $ 10 billion, the observatory was able to take a look at the early universe 830 million years after the big bang. The first beginnings of the cosmic network were discovered, a structure based on dark matter.
The cosmic network is a connection between quasars and super massive black holes. The space telescope observed the Quasar J0305-3150 and found that it consisted of 10 galaxies that were connected by a 3 million light year long thread. This illustrates the immense size of the cosmic network compared to the Milky Way and Andromeda.
The cosmic network was discovered as part of the program "A Spectroscopic Survey of Biased Halos in the Reionization ERA (Aspire)", which were observed 25 quasare that existed in the first billion years after the universe was created. As an aspir, the scientists hope that super -massive black holes have created black holes less than 1 billion years after the big bang. Because based on the current scientific theories, there was not enough material in the universe at that time to form them.
The discovery of the cosmic network by the James Webb space telescope is another milestone in researching the early universe. With the ongoing work of Aspire, further knowledge about the development and emergence of the cosmic network is expected. The results could offer new insights into the history of the universe and the role of super massive black holes.
Source: NASA
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