James Webb Space Telescope Discovers Universe’s Oldest Active Supermassive Black Hole

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In the foggy dawn of the universe, an object has emerged that has left scientists amazed. Observations collected through the James Webb Space Telescope have revealed an active supermassive black hole 10 million times the mass of the Sun. An ancient and distant black hole that was born when the universe was barely 570 million years old? This black hole is so weird that you might think it could be from Another Universe. Multiversal Theorists will have a chuckle there!

Black holes can form when massive stars collapse at the end of their lives or when two smaller holes merge. But how and when did the first black holes form? These are questions that have puzzled scientists and space enthusiasts for decades.

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This is the most tremendous discovery until now.Thanks so much.

saidalawady
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We will never know the real mass of the singularity that created the big bang and the formula for the time needed to produce galaxies or planets. The possibility that the explosion was possibly spreading matter at several times or more the speed of light makes it impossible without observing the event to say with certainty being able to say A was followed by B followed by C etc. If we put what we know of the universe in a 10, 000 page book we would still be on page one.

paulhays
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Where does all this matter come from? The dust, the hydrogen, the nitrogen, helium, argon, carbon oxygen, iron, etc and how gravity is created? In top all of this, how space is created for all these things to take place? There is no end of the space that contains all galaxies, stars, black holes, etc.

tonymartinez