Observations from the James Webb Space Telescope have revealed a surprising number of young galaxies containing massive black holes at their centers, churning up the gas within only a few hundred million years after the Big Bang. Spectroscopic data indicates that these “hidden little monsters” harbor black holes weighing millions of solar masses. The abundance of growing baby black holes challenges theories about how supermassive black holes could have formed so early in the universe’s history. While astrophysicists expected JWST to find some early black holes, the sheer number uncovered has shocked astronomers and could rewrite models of galaxy and black hole formation. If confirmed, these observations suggest that massive black holes may have grown much faster than previously believed possible in the infant universe.

  • maegul (he/they)
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    11 year ago

    With all sincerity and seriousness …

    … kay

    What’s the implication then of Penrose’s idea? That no matter the trajectory of a universe some sort of “big bang” singularity is inevitable, or at least is so for many more trajectories than previously thought.

    • @A_A@lemmy.ca
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      21 year ago

      I read through these and try to understand them but mostly I don’t like those theories, because (in part) more and more there are disparities between them and observations.

      So I came up with some ideas myself, one of which I wrote in here :
      New physical cosmological model : is it coherent ?

      But it may take a few years or a few thousand before we have a good cosmology.