Dubai Telegraph - Webb telescope discovers oldest black hole yet

EUR -
AED 4.250766
AFN 72.908308
ALL 96.082221
AMD 436.873271
ANG 2.071606
AOA 1061.215153
ARS 1597.838385
AUD 1.645756
AWG 2.085976
AZN 1.97195
BAM 1.955467
BBD 2.330193
BDT 141.96215
BGN 1.978129
BHD 0.433607
BIF 3437.085868
BMD 1.157268
BND 1.479667
BOB 7.994742
BRL 6.149843
BSD 1.156998
BTN 108.163052
BWP 15.776518
BYN 3.510218
BYR 22682.452195
BZD 2.326894
CAD 1.587483
CDF 2632.785049
CHF 0.912279
CLF 0.0272
CLP 1074.002997
CNY 7.969415
CNH 7.992203
COP 4296.46149
CRC 540.405658
CUC 1.157268
CUP 30.667601
CVE 110.924591
CZK 24.475107
DJF 205.670119
DKK 7.473526
DOP 68.279225
DZD 152.783891
EGP 59.986564
ERN 17.35902
ETB 181.865115
FJD 2.562713
FKP 0.866861
GBP 0.867431
GEL 3.142029
GGP 0.866861
GHS 12.620054
GIP 0.866861
GMD 85.063652
GNF 10157.924053
GTQ 8.862453
GYD 242.061925
HKD 9.063434
HNL 30.737487
HRK 7.53787
HTG 151.782191
HUF 393.182241
IDR 19627.264756
ILS 3.598091
IMP 0.866861
INR 108.614171
IQD 1516.02104
IRR 1522530.672291
ISK 143.814137
JEP 0.866861
JMD 181.768268
JOD 0.820549
JPY 184.278148
KES 149.986328
KGS 101.200658
KHR 4640.644962
KMF 494.153828
KPW 1041.484287
KRW 1742.741851
KWD 0.354823
KYD 0.964148
KZT 556.232895
LAK 24863.90272
LBP 103633.347039
LKR 360.916993
LRD 212.214059
LSL 19.685569
LTL 3.417112
LVL 0.70002
LYD 7.38381
MAD 10.832611
MDL 20.148831
MGA 4825.807832
MKD 61.713417
MMK 2430.000094
MNT 4131.070323
MOP 9.33887
MRU 46.441602
MUR 53.81729
MVR 17.8918
MWK 2010.174862
MXN 20.713597
MYR 4.558523
MZN 73.953739
NAD 19.477256
NGN 1569.545119
NIO 42.495316
NOK 11.075049
NPR 173.060536
NZD 1.982642
OMR 0.441597
PAB 1.157018
PEN 4.02618
PGK 4.989851
PHP 69.404876
PKR 323.1135
PLN 4.275585
PYG 7556.680787
QAR 4.217668
RON 5.093719
RSD 117.69304
RUB 95.988502
RWF 1688.453967
SAR 4.345607
SBD 9.317929
SCR 16.627341
SDG 695.518442
SEK 10.812706
SGD 1.484085
SHP 0.868251
SLE 28.439904
SLL 24267.343207
SOS 661.382882
SRD 43.383087
STD 23953.110446
STN 24.89862
SVC 10.123276
SYP 128.185157
SZL 19.477247
THB 37.962609
TJS 11.112752
TMT 4.062011
TND 3.366536
TOP 2.786423
TRY 51.244872
TTD 7.84963
TWD 37.032963
TZS 2993.463438
UAH 50.684352
UGX 4373.236539
USD 1.157268
UYU 46.622062
UZS 14112.88327
VES 526.198902
VND 30450.034804
VUV 137.756939
WST 3.175735
XAF 655.853838
XAG 0.017004
XAU 0.000257
XCD 3.127575
XCG 2.085136
XDR 0.816864
XOF 660.225535
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.128291
ZAR 19.821112
ZMK 10416.804592
ZMW 22.590447
ZWL 372.639814
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    -0.2000

    22.65

    -0.88%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    51.84

    -1.02%

  • BP

    -1.0800

    44.78

    -2.41%

  • RIO

    -2.5000

    83.15

    -3.01%

  • NGG

    -3.5400

    81.99

    -4.32%

  • RELX

    -0.4600

    33.36

    -1.38%

  • BTI

    -1.3500

    57.37

    -2.35%

  • RYCEF

    -1.3000

    15.3

    -8.5%

  • AZN

    -5.3300

    183.6

    -2.9%

  • CMSD

    -0.2420

    22.658

    -1.07%

  • JRI

    -0.3900

    11.77

    -3.31%

  • BCC

    -1.5600

    68.3

    -2.28%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    14.33

    -0.63%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    25.79

    +0.23%

Webb telescope discovers oldest black hole yet
Webb telescope discovers oldest black hole yet / Photo: Handout - NASA/AFP

Webb telescope discovers oldest black hole yet

The James Webb space telescope has discovered the oldest black hole ever detected, which was thriving so soon after the Big Bang that it challenges our understanding of how these celestial behemoths form, astronomers said Wednesday.

Text size:

The black hole was vigorously gobbling up its host galaxy just 430 million years after the birth of the universe during a period called the cosmic dawn, according to a study in the journal Nature.

That makes it 200 million years older than any other massive black hole ever observed, study co-author and Cambridge University astronomer Jan Scholtz told AFP.

Yet it has a mass 1.6 million times greater than our Sun.

Exactly how it had time to grow that big so quickly after the Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago will provide new information "for the next generation of theoretical models" aiming to explain what creates black holes, Scholtz said.

Like all black holes, it is invisible and can only be detected by the vast explosions of light created when it gobbles up whatever matter is unlucky enough to be nearby.

It was this light that allowed the Hubble space telescope in 2016 to spot its host galaxy GN-z11, which is in the direction of the Ursa Major constellation.

At the time GN-z11 was the oldest -- and therefore most distant -- galaxy ever observed. However Hubble did not spot the black hole lurking at its centre.

In 2022, Webb usurped Hubble as the most powerful space telescope, unleashing a torrent of discoveries that have scientists rushing to keep up.

Not only has it spotted the black hole at the heart of GN-z11, but it has also discovered galaxies even further back in time and space, which are also bigger than had been thought possible.

- Growing up fast -

The black hole was energetically eating up GN-z11 during the cosmic dawn, a period which came right after the universe's "dark ages," when stars and galaxies were first born.

It normally takes the supermassive black holes squatting at the centre of galaxies hundreds of millions -- if not billions -- of years to form.

So how could this one have grown so quickly?

Study co-author Stephane Charlot, an astrophysicist at France's Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris, suggested that black holes in the early universe could have been formed in a different way than those closer by.

One theory is that they were born huge due to the explosion of especially massive stars that only existed in the early universe, he told AFP.

Or they could have been created by the "direct collapse of a dense gas cloud, without going through the star formation phase," he added.

Once born, the black hole would have been able to gorge itself on the plentiful gas nearby, prompting an almighty growth spurt.

Scholtz emphasised that what has been discovered so far about the black hole of GN-z11 "doesn't rule out any of these scenarios".

And it could be just the beginning.

Scholtz hopes that Webb -- and other telescopes on the way, such as the European Space Agency's Euclid -- will discover more of these black holes in the earliest glimmers of the universe.

H.Hajar--DT