The Manila Times

Webb telescope discovers oldest black hole yet

FAR, FAR AWAY

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The James Webb space telescope has discovered the oldest black hole ever detected, which was thriving so soon after the Big Bang that it challenges our understand­ing of how these celestial behemoths form, astronomer­s said Wednesday (Thursday in Manila).

The black hole was vigorously gobbling up its host galaxy just 430 million years after the birth of the universe during a period called the cosmic dawn, according to a study in the journal Nature.

That makes it 200 million years older than any other massive black hole ever observed, study co-author and Cambridge University astronomer Jan Scholtz told Agence France-Presse.

Yet it has a mass 1.6 million times greater than our Sun.

Exactly how it had time to grow that big so quickly after the Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago will provide new informatio­n “for the next generation of theoretica­l models” aiming to explain what creates black holes, Scholtz said.

Like all black holes, it is invisible and can only be detected by the vast explosions of light created when it gobbles up whatever matter is unlucky enough to be nearby.

It was this light that allowed the Hubble space telescope in 2016 to spot its host galaxy GN-z11, which is in the direction of the Ursa Major constellat­ion.

At the time GN-z11 was the oldest — and therefore most distant — galaxy ever observed. However Hubble did not spot the black hole lurking at its center.

In 2022, Webb usurped Hubble as the most powerful space telescope, unleashing a torrent of discoverie­s that have scientists rushing to keep up.

Not only has it spotted the black hole at the heart of GN-z11, but it has also

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? This handout image released by NASA/ESA/STScI on March 3, 2016, shows the bright infant galaxy, named GN-z11, seen as it was 13.4 billion years in the past, just 400 million years after the Big Bang.
AFP PHOTO This handout image released by NASA/ESA/STScI on March 3, 2016, shows the bright infant galaxy, named GN-z11, seen as it was 13.4 billion years in the past, just 400 million years after the Big Bang.

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