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A reanaly first f data from the James Webb Space Telescop Technically supermassive black holes were present during the first 50 million years of our 13.8 billion-year-old universe.
The findings could challenge the idea that black holes formed only after the first stars and galaxies emerged.
If true, that'd mean our current theories of how galaxies grew may need revision.
JWST could provide more accurate early star and supermassive black hole counts that will confirm the new theory.
The team's research was published in the Astrophysical Journ the James Webb Space Telescope un is one star in 100 billion in the Milky Way galaxy, and there's a mas the first 50 million years the mid 13.8 billion-year-old ="summaryFeed_highLightText__NxlGi">Twitter the U.K.’s Open University first n class="summaryFeed_highLightText__NxlGi">Rob the Milky Way Journal of Physics ZME Science Newsweek Joseph Silk summaryFeed_highLightText__NxlGi" Johns Hopkins University n> New Scientist Physics World U.K. Robe Silk ea JWST e Space.com Newsletter Earth Ligh the summer of 2022 Astrophysical Journal Letters January a year two Milky Way 100 billion Silk ummaryFeed_highLightText__NxlGi">one $10 billion JWST first Silk around a few hundred million years old second first two first wo Silk d_highLightText__NxlGi">first Silk as early as 100 million years the Big Bang aryFeed_highLightTex Silk xlGi">Silk the first days of January Gi">AGN a calendar year
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