The James Webb Space Telescope has confirmed the most distant, early galaxy in the known universe. The new contender, MoM-z14, is visible just 280 million years after the Big Bang.
MoM-z14's light has travelled over 13.5 billion years to reach Earth, the scientists have revealed.
By measuring the galaxy’s redshift, the scientists behind the discovery were able to confirm that its light has been ...
MoM stands for “Mirage or Miracle” from the eponymous survey. The MoM survey aims to confirm whether the objects that appear ...
Scientists at CERN, together with MIT physicists, have found strong evidence that the universe’s first “primordial soup” ...
"Looking out into the universe is uniquely allowing us to look back in time and piece together this beautiful cosmic story ...
The James Webb Space Telescope is peering deeper into space than any telescope before it — essentially looking back in time toward the universe’s earliest moments. Near what many call the “edge” of ...
WUWM astronomy contributor Jean Creighton discusses cosmology ahead of "Birth of the Universe" at UWM's Manfred Olson ...
NASA scientists using the James Webb Space Telescope and Chandra X-ray Observatory have identified an early-stage galaxy cluster forming just one billion years after the Big Bang, challenging current ...
Researchers using the James Webb Space Telescope have found a galaxy that is offering new data about the early stages of the ...
JWST spots most distant galaxy ever, pushing the limits of the observable universe The galaxy MoM-z14 could offer clues to ...
The NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope has topped itself once again, delivering on its promise to push the boundaries of ...