Scientists have discovered the most distant object found in the universe

Imagem galáxia HD1 é o objeto mais distante do universo

It is a new milestone in space exploration. Scientists may have glimpsed some of the oldest materials in the universe. According to one studyResearchers have found something unknown about 13.5 billion light-years away, and it has yet to be reviewed.

That’s about the same age as the universe, which means the object called HD1 is likely to be a particularly distant galaxy.

Galaxy HD1 picture is the farthest thing in the universe

NASA, last March 23and promised an "exciting discovery" worthy of entering the "record books".

The news came that Hubble had found the most distant and oldest solar system to date. Now there are more distant discoveries.

HD1: The most distant galaxy ever found

The universe will be about 14 billion years old. According to Live Science, HD1 will be the oldest object ever captured. According to a researcher from Harvard University, this object can reveal many other things that are part of the birth of the universe itself.

The first galaxies formed about a hundred million years after the Big Bang. The mass of the Milky Way was one part million and even more dense.

One way to think of these things as building blocks is in the formation scheme of current galaxies, such as our own Milky Way.

He said Avi Loebthe Harvard University professor who set out to take high-resolution images of flying objects.

The first stars and galaxies formed in the first hundreds of millions of years after the Big Bang, as shown here in this picture of the evolution of the universe. (Image credit: Harikane et al., NASA, EST and P. Oesch/Yale)

There were two ideas for the definition of HD1: it could be a file interstellar galaxy, which are making stars at a high rate, and could be home to the first stars in the universe; Or the object could contain a supermassive black hole with a mass about 100 million times the mass of the Sun.

If HD1 is a black hole, we should see X-ray emission from it. If we don't find X-rays, the emission must originate from massive stars.

Happy Avi Lube.

Fortunately, there is a new working origin that we can rely on to inform us of news of the new discovery.

So researchers hope to get images and details about HD1 from NASA's largest and most powerful telescope - the James Webb Space Telescope.

By Chris Skeldon

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