James Webb Space Telescope spots rapidly feeding supermassive black hole in the infant universe: ‘This discovery is truly remarkable.’

James Webb Space Telescope spots rapidly feeding supermassive black hole in the infant universe: ‘This discovery is truly remarkable.’

Using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), astronomers have uncovered a voraciously feeding and rapidly growing supermassive black hole in the infant universe. Existing just 570 million years after the Big Bang, this black hole sits at the heart of the galaxy CANUCS-LRD-z8.6.

CANUCS-LRD-z8.6 is an example of the class of galaxies in the early universe called “Little Red Dots.” These small, bright, and extremely distant objects have been routinely discovered by the JWST since it began observations in 2022. Little Red Dots have mystified astronomers because they don’t seem to conform to our understanding of how galaxies evolve in step with their central supermassive black holes, leading some scientists to dub them “universe-breaking” galaxies. That’s because Little Red Dots are either way too dense to account for the masses of their stars or host a supermassive black hole that is way too massive to sit in such a small galaxy.

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