Amorphous space blob takes title for most distant galaxy
P. OESCH AND I. MOMCHEVA (YALE UNIVERSITY), AND THE 3D-HST AND HUDF09/XDF TEAMS, NASA, ESA
The new record holder for the most distant galaxy is an amorphous blob May 5 in the Astrophysical Journal Letters. EGS-zs8-1’s brightness indicates that the galaxy had already built up roughly 8 billion suns when the light left for Earth.
By studying a galaxy as it was when the universe was a mere 650 million years old, astronomers hope to better understand how seeds of gas and dark matter eventually grow to the majestic spiral and elliptical galaxies that exist today.
By studying a galaxy as it was when the universe was a mere 650 million years old, astronomers hope to better understand how seeds of gas and dark matter eventually grow to the majestic spiral and elliptical galaxies that exist today.
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