JWST Discovered The Farthest Star Ever Seen!
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Top Comments (10)
How incredible is it that light rays once from the same source but then lost from each other for billions of years at ludicrous distances finally end their journey back together again in such a tiny patch of space as a telescope receiver. EDIT: _some_ light beams guys, didn't mean all
once I saw George Clooney from far away. Furthest star I've seen
This is one case where we can say with certainty that the star we are seeing no longer exists. It exploded a long time ago but the light from the explosion hasn't reached us yet.
as an ent-level tolkienist, i am fervently hoping that it turns out that earendel is in fact revealed to be a binary star system, as discussed at 11:00, and the individual stars can be named laurelin and telperion. ❤
In case anyone is wondering, Earendel's proper distance is 28 billion light years away (the distance its location is now), the light we see from it is 12.5 billion years old, and it was 3.5 billion light years away when it existed and emitted the light we see now.
Absolutely love the name for this star! The star of Eärendil…
Hearing Matt talk about LOTR characters and quickly shift to astrophysics and cosmology is next level nerd and I couldn't be happier 🧙♂️✨🌌
"Hold up, we need to talk about how nerdy I can go for a full minute here" ...."OK now back to the physics"
I don't think Galadriel would be happy if she found out that JWST captured the light of Eärendil.
Somewhere deep in the dark distant past, a voice carried on stellar winds is *still* traveling billions of light years towards us to announce: "FIRST!" 😂
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Top Comments (10)
How incredible is it that light rays once from the same source but then lost from each other for billions of years at ludicrous distances finally end their journey back together again in such a tiny patch of space as a telescope receiver. EDIT: _some_ light beams guys, didn't mean all
once I saw George Clooney from far away. Furthest star I've seen
This is one case where we can say with certainty that the star we are seeing no longer exists. It exploded a long time ago but the light from the explosion hasn't reached us yet.
as an ent-level tolkienist, i am fervently hoping that it turns out that earendel is in fact revealed to be a binary star system, as discussed at 11:00, and the individual stars can be named laurelin and telperion. ❤
In case anyone is wondering, Earendel's proper distance is 28 billion light years away (the distance its location is now), the light we see from it is 12.5 billion years old, and it was 3.5 billion light years away when it existed and emitted the light we see now.
Absolutely love the name for this star! The star of Eärendil…
Hearing Matt talk about LOTR characters and quickly shift to astrophysics and cosmology is next level nerd and I couldn't be happier 🧙♂️✨🌌
"Hold up, we need to talk about how nerdy I can go for a full minute here" ...."OK now back to the physics"
I don't think Galadriel would be happy if she found out that JWST captured the light of Eärendil.
Somewhere deep in the dark distant past, a voice carried on stellar winds is *still* traveling billions of light years towards us to announce: "FIRST!" 😂