The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) was designed to look back in time and study galaxies that existed shortly after the Big ...
8don MSN
Did we just see a black hole explode? Physicists think so—and it could explain (almost) everything
In 2023, a subatomic particle called a neutrino crashed into Earth with such a high amount of energy that it should have been impossible. In fact, there are no known sources anywhere in the universe ...
Observing such an explosion could unlock secrets of the universe. Like cracking a cosmic piñata, an exploding PBH would ...
Techno-Science.net on MSN
James Webb's red dots: the key to giant black holes?
The James Webb Space Telescope has revealed surprising objects in the early Universe in recent years: the "Little Red Dots".
Space.com on MSN
Are mysterious 'Little Red Dots' discovered by the James Webb Space Telescope actually nurseries for direct-collapse black holes?
"It is exciting to think that Little Red Dots may represent the first direct observational evidence of the birth of the most massive black holes in the universe." ...
Humanity has worked itself into a position where we can detect a single high-energy particle from space and wonder where in ...
Supermassive black holes appear early in the universe, too big to match growth models. New simulations suggest even "light seed” black holes could bulk up rapidly through frenzied feeding bursts ...
A team of astronomers including George Washington University physics Ph.D. student Eliza Neights recorded an extraordinary cosmic outburst this July which likely heralds a new kind of stellar ...
The black hole was bigger than expected, and while the answer was hiding in plain sight, it still rewrites what we thought was possible. Reading time 4 minutes When LIGO broke news of an ...
New models explain how small black holes in the early universe beat the clock and grew into massive objects within millions of years.
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