JWST Discovered The Farthest Star Ever Seen!
To understand where we came from—how earth, the solar system, the galaxy became what they are today—we need to understand the beginning of time. For example, how did the first galaxies pull themselves together from the dark universe-filling ocean of gas that followed the Big Bang? With the James Webb Space Telescope we’re starting to be able to find those first galaxies. It’s hard work because at those crazy distances all we see is tiny, faint and fuzzy blobs. If only we could see the individual stars in those galaxies we could learn so much more. Well, now using this one weird trick we can do exactly that. Or at least we have one lonely star at the end of the universe. But it won’t be lonely for long.
Tags
Comments
Leave a Comment
Comments are loading... If you don't see any, be the first to comment!
Related Videos
NASA | JWST Feature - Evolution of the Universe
NASA Goddard
How We Could Study the First Nanoseconds of the Universe
SciShow Space
Our New Galactic Neighborhood, and a Tar Comet?
SciShow Space
How Vera Rubin Found the First Direct Evidence for Dark Matter
SciShow Space
How Scientists Made the Hottest Thing Ever
It's Okay to Be Smart
How Do You Measure the Size of the Universe?
PBS Space Time
Why Is The World Rushing Back To The Moon?
PBS Space Time

What Happens To Quantum Information Inside A Black Hole?
PBS Space Time

Epic Spaceman: “I shrink 10x every 21s until I’m an atom.”
Owner - The kid should see this

Father & Son Story for Kids: Made for Me! | Vooks Narrated Storybooks
Vooks
