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JWST’s Glorious New Deep Field Is Chock-A-Block Full Of Galaxies Stretching Billions Of Years

Look at this incredible view! Galaxies stretching over billions of years in a single small-but-mighty image from JWST with some assistance from the Hubble Space Telescope. 

It is a small area of the sky, equivalent to holding a square of one millimeter by one millimeter at arm’s length. But tens of thousands of galaxies are visible in this patch, stretching for tens of billions of light-years.

Let’s look at the deep field in detail. Everything that has six bright spokes is a star in our galaxy. The true star of the image is a massive group of galaxies as it appeared when the universe was 6.5 billion years old. That is a little less than half the universe’s current age. That means its light traveled for 7 billion years to reach us, but the group is not just 7 billion light-years away. Due to the expansion of the cosmos, it is now much further away.

The full image of the new deep field.

Image credit: ESA/Webb, NASA & CSA, G. Gozaliasl, A. Koekemoer, M. Franco, and the COSMOS-Web team

The image is part of the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS-Web) that looks at galaxies across many different ages of the universe. This main galaxy group is the most massive in the COSMOS-Web survey, but there are groups and galaxies in this image whose light comes to us from 1.9 billion years after the Big Bang – that’s just 14 percent of the universe’s current age.

COSMOS-Web wants to provide new insights into the formation of the universe’s most massive galaxies.

Source Link: JWST's Glorious New Deep Field Is Chock-A-Block Full Of Galaxies Stretching Billions Of Years

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