The Mike Horner ArchivesHubble Space Telescope shocked astronomers when it discovered Earendel, a star so old, it existed perhaps just 1 billion years after the big bang.
Now the experts have used the James Webb Space Telescope, Hubble's powerful infrared partner, to take a gander, and its first look has revealed even more details about the star. To scientists' surprise, Earendel might actually have a cooler, redder space companion: another star. Because the expansion of the universe has stretched the other lightsource to wavelengths longer than Hubble can sense, only Webb could find those clues.
"Astronomers did not expect Webb to reveal any companions of Earendel since they would be so close together and indistinguishable in the sky," according to the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Studying a star like Earendel is valuable because it holds secrets to how the universe, thought to be 13.8 billion years old, began and evolved. With Webb, the leading space observatory run by NASA and the European and Canadian space agencies, scientists have gained new insights into the star’s type and the galaxy around it known as the Sunrise Arc. Future research by the telescope could reveal even more information about the star's brightness, temperature, and composition.
The new findings indicate Earendel, meaning "morning star" in Old English, is a massive B-type star, more than double the temperature of the sun and about 1 million times brighter.
Hubble was able to detect Earendel last year due to a quirk of nature known as gravitational lensing. This phenomenon happens when a celestial object has such a massive gravitational pull, it warps the time and space around it.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Want more scienceand tech news delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up for Mashable's Light Speed newslettertoday.
NASA often uses the analogy of a bowling ball placed on a foam mattress or trampoline to illustrate how the fabric of spacetime bends. Light that would otherwise travel straight curves and gets distorted as it passes through the warped spacetime.
Gravitational lensing even has the potential to replicate objects, the way a funhouse mirror can create multiple irregular copies of images.
In this case, Earendel only appears once, but the galaxy cluster WHL0137-08, about 28 billion light-years from Earth, is acting like a colossal magnifying glass. It warps spacetime, allowing scientists to see even more distant objects in the cosmos. The extra prescription strength of a gravitational lens can help extend the view of telescopes to see even earlier galaxies.
Astronomers are now adept at spotting the telltale tricks of gravitational lensing, but that wasn't always true. In 1987, an enormous blue arc thought to be hundreds of trillions of miles long was first considered one of the largest objects ever detected in space. Later that year, scientists sorted out, with the help of Einstein's General Theory of Relativity, that they were in fact looking at an optical illusion, distorted by a galaxy cluster. The New York Times' published a story about the "bizarre" implication of their findings, titled "Vast Cosmic Object Downgraded to a Mirage."
Since Hubble’s discovery of Earendel, Webb has detected other extremely distant (and, thus, old) stars using the gravitational lensing technique, though none quite so far away. Another group of scientists discovered one nicknamed Quyllur, a red giant star observed about 3 billion years after the big bang.
"The research team has cautious hope that this could be a step toward the eventual detection of one of the very first generation of stars," the institute says, "composed only of the raw ingredients of the universe created in the big bang — hydrogen and helium."
Jon Snow teaches Ginger Spice how to say 'You know nothing, Jon Snow''Mr. Trololo' Eduard Khil gets immortalized with his own Google DoodleZayn Malik is bald now, and fans are in deep, deep mourningFlying a plane through Hurricane Irma looks absolutely terrifyingHurricane Irma: Monster storm is perfect in the most alarming waysHere are all the deportable offenses Trump's crappy children have committedWhatsApp rolls out new features for businesses to chat with customersThe Lily drone is back in perhaps the saddest rebirth in gadget historyDevelopers hid a heartfelt tribute to a deceased fan hacker in 'Sonic Mania'We have a first look at Rami Malek as Freddie Mercury and please send help'Dreamer' dies after attempting to save Harvey victimsLaurene Powell Jobs' ad slams Trump on DACA with the words of Ronald ReaganThis fearless artist was lifted by 20,000 balloons for 9 hoursEmbargo dates and Rotten Tomatoes scores: What's the relationship?'Minecraft' fan creators have made a ton of money off the game, apparentlyXiaomi advertises its first Android One phone as 'similar to iPhone'Hurricane hunters fly through the eye of Hurricane IrmaMark Zuckerberg on DACA repeal: 'This is a sad day for our country'The 8 best gadgets from Berlin's IFA 2017 technology show9 things that will 100% maybe happen in 'Game of Thrones' Season 8 Alexis Ohanian showed off the NFT he bought for Serena Williams at the Met Gala The M2 MacBook Air is on sale for a record How to see if someone unfollows you on Instagram Lewis Lapham Remembers Peter Matthiessen The Morning News Roundup for September 4, 2014 Snapchat Dreams conjures up fantastical AI The Met Gala outfits were glorious, weird, and ripe for Twitter roasts TikTok's Kat Callaghan narrates a Calm Sleep Story Notes on the Selfie Stick Tomorrow: Robyn Creswell at NYU Cardboard, Glue, and Storytelling The City and the Pillar Apple's new iPad Pro will have larger OLED display, report says The Morning News Roundup for September 19, 2014 The Morning News Roundup for September 15, 2014 'Only Murders in the Building': Read that silly end credits article about Ben What is going on with the chair emoji on TikTok? Writing Advice from D. H. Lawrence at Twenty DeepTok is taking over TikTok with berries and cream videos HYBE and Geffen are creating a global girl group. And Netflix is filming it.
2.3483s , 10133.59375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Mike Horner Archives】,Pursuit Information Network