"James Webb Telescope Uncovers Oldest Black Hole at Dawn of Time"

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The James Webb Space Telescope has detected the earliest known black hole, about 1.6 million times the mass of the Sun, in the galaxy GN-z11, formed just 400 million years after the Big Bang. This challenges existing theories on black hole formation and growth, suggesting alternative scenarios such as the collapse of vast gas clouds or the rapid merging of smaller black holes. The black hole's intense feeding could be hindering the galaxy's growth by sweeping away its gas, potentially quenching star formation. This discovery reveals the early diversity of black holes and their host galaxies.
- James Webb Telescope reveals earliest known black hole inside galaxy GN-z11 NPR
- Stars alone can't explain black holes, JWST data reveals Big Think
- Astronomers detect oldest black hole ever observed Phys.org
- James Webb telescope discovers the oldest, most distant black hole in the universe Livescience.com
- Oldest black hole ever discovered dates back to the dawn of time Earth.com
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