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Space

James Webb Space Telescope Discovers the Earliest Galaxy Ever Seen (space.com) 45

The James Webb Space Telescope has discovered the most distant galaxy ever observed, named MoM z14. NASA estimates it existed just 280 million years after the Big Bang. Space.com reports: Prior to the discovery of MoM z14, the galaxy holding the title of earliest and distant was JADES-GS-z14-0, which existed just 300 million years after the Big Bang, or around 13.5 billion years ago. This previous record galaxy has a redshift of z =14.32, while MoM z14 has a redshift of z = 14.44. There is a wider context to the observation of MoM z14 than the fact that it has broken the record for earliest known galaxy by 20 million years, though, as [explained team member and Yale University professor of Astronomy and Physics Pieter van Dokkum].

The researchers were able to determine that MoM z14 is around 50 times smaller than the Milky Way. The team also measured emission lines from the galaxy, indicating the presence of elements like nitrogen and carbon. "The emission lines are unusual; it indicates that the galaxy is very young, with a rapidly increasing rate of forming new stars," van Dokkum said. "There are also indications that there is not much neutral hydrogen gas surrounding the galaxy, which would be surprising: the very early universe is expected to be filled with neutral hydrogen. "That needs even better spectra and more galaxies, to investigate more fully."

The presence of carbon and nitrogen in MoM z14 indicates that there are earlier galaxies to be discovered than this 13.52 billion-year-old example. That is because the very earliest galaxies in the universe and their stars were filled with the simplest elements in the cosmos, hydrogen and helium. Later galaxies would be populated by these heavier elements, which astronomers somewhat confusingly call "metal," as their stars forged them and then dispersed them in supernova explosions.
The research has been published on arXiv.

James Webb Space Telescope Discovers the Earliest Galaxy Ever Seen

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  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2025 @03:45AM (#65426433)

    What the summary leaves out is the most important part! They found a pulsing pattern and have managed to decode the first part of it which reads: "We've been trying to reach you about your car's extended warranty..."

    • What the summary leaves out is the most important part! They found a pulsing pattern and have managed to decode the first part of it which reads: "We've been trying to reach you about your car's extended warranty..."

      LOL. Thank you for a more lighthearted version. The first decoded transmission theme they went with in Contact was accurately uncomfortable.

    • Lede.

      • by rossdee ( 243626 )

        Thankyou

        This galaxy is too early to have any Lead (Pb)

        • Not if there has already been time for supernovae to create heavier elements, like lead, and disperse them which the results indicate is the case here. Stars large enough to undergo supernovae have relatively short lives and, as the summary notes, the presence of heavier elements suggests that this galaxy was around for long enough for supernovae to have already happened meaning that there are even younger galaxies yet to be found.
      • Lead. Lead as in the opposite of 'follow' is written as 'lead' everywhere. 'lede' was used to avoid confusion with lead (Pb), the stuff newspaper type was made of. Since nobody has used Pb to cast newspaper type for decades, this use is archaic and unneccessary, making it pretentious hipsterism and not a serious word.

    • They found another one later that read “Not only was your copper of substandard quality, you've also been very rude to my servant sent to collect it.”

  • by shilly ( 142940 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2025 @03:46AM (#65426435)

    The US was once capable of leading an international effort to put up this extraordinary piece of science, technology and engineering and thus enabling humanity to peer in to the deep past. It did this through NASA, of course. Now we have endless fuckwittery and attempts to damage every government agency capable of doing anything. Ozymandias beckons

  • I think this is cool and all but it seems like every other day I see this exact same thing in the news but with a different galaxy. With how many times we keep finding the "oldest known Galaxy" and the way it's reported it isn't even exciting anymore. It just feels like calling the last galaxy discovered as the oldest was premature.
    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      What about the title "James Webb Space Telescope Discovers the Earliest Galaxy Ever Seen" do you not understand?

    • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2025 @07:39AM (#65426677)

      I think this is cool and all but it seems like every other day I see this exact same thing in the news but with a different galaxy. With how many times we keep finding the "oldest known Galaxy" and the way it's reported it isn't even exciting anymore. It just feels like calling the last galaxy discovered as the oldest was premature.

      It's galaxies all the way away down!

      I think the Webb has been pumping out data at such a rate that we get the "oldest galaxy ever found" stuff seemingly continuously.

      One thing is for certain. If we've found a galaxy that close to the BB, 300 million years is pretty damn near there to the singularity. In cosmological terms, that's not even a blink of the eye. We can't find much earlier any more, and if we do, the Big Bang cosmology will be debunked.

      Anyhow, I'm pretty excited by this. Yeah, Nitrogen and carbon being found that close to the singularity is already an issue in a Universe that wasn't supposed to have those elements yet.

      • 300 million years is pretty damn near there to the singularity. In cosmological terms, that's not even a blink of the eye.

        300 million years is over 2% of the lifespan of the universe. If we take the average human lifespan to be about 80 years that would be a "blink of the eye" lasting 1.7 years which is quite a long blink.

        • Fingers crossed the universe is not like an 80 year old though. I'd prefer to think of it as a teenager with lots of life left.
          • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

            > Fingers crossed the universe is not like an 80 year old though. I'd prefer to think of it as a teenager

            God will give you a choice between a doddling Biden universe or a mad-clown Trump universe.

        • by Temkin ( 112574 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2025 @09:17AM (#65426889)

          300 million years is over 2% of the lifespan of the universe. If we take the average human lifespan to be about 80 years that would be a "blink of the eye" lasting 1.7 years which is quite a long blink.

          300 million years is also enough time for at least 15 generations of massive stars (assuming they could form at all). Stars like VY Canis Majoris, which live at most 20 million years and then supernovae, distributing their carbon & nitrogen "ashes". But stars in this category don't even wait until the die, they churn and pulse and build dust shells around themselves. Their orbits thru galaxies are something akin to Schulz's cartoon character "Pigpen" walking thru a room. We suspect a star's upper limit is something like 1700 solar radii today, but even this can't be assumed in the early universe. At what point in density does a galaxy and a star differentiate into separate objects? That's hidden in that unobserved gap between the CMB and these early galaxies.

          T

        • 300 million years is pretty damn near there to the singularity. In cosmological terms, that's not even a blink of the eye.

          300 million years is over 2% of the lifespan of the universe. If we take the average human lifespan to be about 80 years that would be a "blink of the eye" lasting 1.7 years which is quite a long blink.

          Perhaps I err in hyperbole. My bad. Perhaps it would be more accurate to say that scientists are stunned to find heavier elements at an earlier stage of th Universe, and this changes everything! Just funnin'

  • which is Yiddish for "bastard".

  • Its not confusing that these elements from super novae are called "metal" despite their non-traditionally metallic properties. Exploding suns are, arguably, the most metal thing to ever exist since the dawn of time. *riffs on guitar* (As confirmed by the telescope)
  • Are there other known reasons that galaxies can be moving away from us?
    Perhaps a near miss with another galaxy could have accelerated this one in such a direction that its red shift makes it appear older than it is.
    The presence of Carbon and Nitrogen, and the lack of neutral hydrogen suggest that it is not as old as its red shift indicates.
    I only read the article cited in the summary, not the actual paper.

God may be subtle, but he isn't plain mean. -- Albert Einstein

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