James Webb-teleskooppi havaitsee kauimpana sijaitsevan, kaiken aallonpituuden valossa näkymättömän ja 6 miljardin Auringon verran painavan mustan aukon

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An illustration of JWST spying the black hole’s host galaxy through a gravitational lens. The black hole (right) is thought to be the most distant, ancient dormant black hole ever detected.(Image credit: Navid Marvi/Carnegie Science)Share this article 0Join the conversationFollow usAdd us as a preferred source on GoogleSubscribe to our newsletter

The James Webb Space Telescope has identified the most remote, inactive black hole in the observable universe, concealed within a galaxy situated over 10 billion light-years away from our planet.

This newly examined black hole, found in a galaxy designated MRG-M0138, surpasses the prior record for such an object’s distance by a factor of 15, as detailed in research published on Thursday, June 4, in the journal Science.

When stars go stagnant

The galaxy MRG-M0138 is depicted in this image from the James Webb Space Telescope, visible due to gravitational lensing through a foreground cluster of galaxies (white sources).

(Image credit: NASA/JWST)

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Sourse: www.livescience.com

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