The Universe's Earliest Black Hole Dyes Its Home Galaxy a Bright Shade of Red
TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS, AUG 8 – The black hole has a mass up to 300 million times the sun and accounts for half the stars in its galaxy, offering insights into early black hole growth and galaxy evolution.
7 Articles
7 Articles
Scientists discovered a distant black hole 300 million times the size of the sun
Astronomers have discovered the oldest and most distant black hole — a behemoth that likely formed at the dawn of the universe, more than 13 billion years ago. The black hole lies at the center of a galaxy known as CAPERS-LRD-z9. Both cosmic objects are thought to have formed around 13.3 billion years ago, or just 500 million years after the big bang that created the universe. (The big bang theory suggests the universe started as an ultradense, …
Scientists Suggest a Black Hole 300 Million Times the Sun’s Size Could Be a Gateway to the Universe's Dawn.
Spectroscopy enables astronomers to detect traces of matter in stars, galaxies, and other cosmic entities. Black holes consume dust and encounter various phenomena around them; as material spirals into a black hole, it compresses and heats up. Stephen Finkelstein, a co-author and professor of astronomy at the University of Texas at Austin, noted that all [...] The post Scientists Suggest a Black Hole 300 Million Times the Sun’s Size Could Be a G…
Earliest Black Hole Found: Universe's First Confirmed! – Archyde
Archyde The Universe’s Oldest Black Hole Reveals a New Era in Cosmic Understanding Just 500 million years after the Big Bang, when the universe was a mere 3% of its current… You can read the full story here: Earliest Black Hole Found: Universe’s First Confirmed!.
Meet a monster black hole at the dawn of time
An international team of astronomers, led by The University of Texas at Austin’s Cosmic Frontier Center, has identified the most distant black hole ever confirmed. It and the galaxy it calls home, CAPERS-LRD-z9, are present 500 million years after the Big Bang. That places it 13.3 billion years into the past, when our universe was just 3% of its current age. Hear the story from the study’s lead author, Dr. Anthony Taylor, in the player above or …
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