James Webb Space Telescope posted a photo:
Which came first, galaxies or black holes?
New Webb observations show that some supermassive black holes were enormous from their beginnings, shifting traditional ideas around how black holes form and grow.
Webb looked at an object called QSO1, which existed just 700 million years after the big bang. Despite being more than 13 billion light-years away and only 1300 light-years across, it is relatively easy to study, because its light is being magnified by the gravity of a galaxy cluster that lies between it and us. This object is visible in three different spots (a, b, and c) due to this effect.
QSO1 was observed using a special mode of our Near Infrared Spectrograph that allows us to map data spatially. The result is a map of the motions of the gas that surrounds the black hole, and thus the black hole’s mass - something that was not possible to do before Webb.
The gas around QSO1’s black hole is almost entirely hydrogen and helium, with almost no heavier elements present. Heavier elements are the by-products of star formation, meaning this object isn’t a galaxy rich with stars.
The black hole is immense, ~50 million times the mass of the Sun, and it makes up for two-thirds of the object’s mass. In other nearby galaxies, the supermassive black hole is only a tiny fraction of the host galaxy’s total mass. An object already this massive in the early universe (and without a substantial galaxy surrounding it) wouldn’t have had the time to form its black hole gradually from smaller stellar-mass black holes merging and feeding on nearby material.
It’s possible this is evidence for the existence of types of supermassive black holes that have only been theorized: either primordial black holes that formed in the first second after the birth of the universe; or ones formed directly from the collapse of a large gas cloud. It’s not yet clear from which process QSO1’s black hole resulted, but it was almost certainly born big, and might also be in the early stages of building a galaxy around itself.
Read more: science.nasa.gov/missions/webb/nasas-webb-reveals-black-h...
Credit: Image: NASA, ESA, CSA, Lukas Furtak (Ben-Gurion University); Image Processing: Alyssa Pagan (STScI)
Image description: Space telescope image showing hundreds of bright objects of different size, color, and shape on the black background of space. Colors range from white to deep red. Shapes include elliptical, spiral, dot-like, dash-like, and arcuate. Many of the large objects near the center of the image are fuzzy white, with bright white cores. Many smaller objects scattered throughout the image are pink to red. Three objects in the central part of the image are called out with small white boxes: A box labeled “C” at about 12 o’clock; one labeled “B” at 3 o’clock; and a box labeled “A” at 4 o’clock. Images of the three objects are enlarged in boxes running vertically along the right. From top to bottom these are labeled QSO1A, QSO1B, and QSO1C. At the center of each box is a tiny, circular red dot. QSO1A (top) is notably larger, brighter, and clearer than the other two. QSO1B, in the middle, is smallest and fuzziest, and is somewhat washed out by the light of a larger white object next to it.
James Webb Space Telescope posted a photo:
Which came first, galaxies or black holes?
New Webb observations show that some supermassive black holes were enormous from their beginnings, shifting traditional ideas around how black holes form and grow.
Webb looked at an object called QSO1, which existed just 700 million years after the big bang. Despite being more than 13 billion light-years away and only 1300 light-years across, it is relatively easy to study, because its light is being magnified by the gravity of a galaxy cluster that lies between it and us. This object is visible in three different spots (a, b, and c) due to this effect.
QSO1 was observed using a special mode of our Near Infrared Spectrograph that allows us to map data spatially. The result is a map of the motions of the gas that surrounds the black hole, and thus the black hole’s mass - something that was not possible to do before Webb.
The gas around QSO1’s black hole is almost entirely hydrogen and helium, with almost no heavier elements present. Heavier elements are the by-products of star formation, meaning this object isn’t a galaxy rich with stars.
The black hole is immense, ~50 million times the mass of the Sun, and it makes up for two-thirds of the object’s mass. In other nearby galaxies, the supermassive black hole is only a tiny fraction of the host galaxy’s total mass. An object already this massive in the early universe (and without a substantial galaxy surrounding it) wouldn’t have had the time to form its black hole gradually from smaller stellar-mass black holes merging and feeding on nearby material.
It’s possible this is evidence for the existence of types of supermassive black holes that have only been theorized: either primordial black holes that formed in the first second after the birth of the universe; or ones formed directly from the collapse of a large gas cloud. It’s not yet clear from which process QSO1’s black hole resulted, but it was almost certainly born big, and might also be in the early stages of building a galaxy around itself.
This image: an image detail from NIRCam on NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope shows one of the triple images Webb captured of QSO1, gravitationally lensed by Abell 2744, an enormous mega-cluster of galaxies also known as Pandora’s Cluster.
Pulled out to the right is a map showing the speed that gas is moving toward or away from the telescope (rotational velocity) in different parts of QSO1. The map was made with data collected using NIRSpec’s integral field unit (IFU), a combination of camera and spectrograph. The IFU gathers an image along with 900 spectra from a square patch of sky 3 arcseconds by 3 arcseconds, creating maps showing differences in brightness of thousands of wavelengths between 0.6-micron and 5.3-micron light across the object. The gas velocity is calculated based on Doppler shift: The colors are shifted slightly toward shorter (bluer) wavelengths where material is moving toward us, and longer (redder) wavelengths where it is moving away.
The Webb data shows that the glowing gas has Keplerian rotation: It is orbiting a central point in the same way that planets orbit a star. This means that most of the mass of QSO1 must reside in a single point in the center, i.e., a black hole. Because the velocity of the orbiting gas follows very simple laws of gravity, the data can then be used to calculate the mass of the black hole: It appears to be 50 million solar masses, or 50 million times the mass of our Sun. This is at least two-thirds of the entire mass of QSO1.
Read more: science.nasa.gov/missions/webb/nasas-webb-reveals-black-h...
Credit: Image: NASA, ESA, CSA, Ignas Juodžbalis (Cambridge), Cosimo Marconcini (University of Florence), Roberto Maiolino (Cambridge), Francesco D'Eugenio (Cambridge), Hannah Übler (MPE); Image Processing: Alyssa Pagan (STScI)
Image description: Image at left. Pullout with map on right. Left: Space telescope image labeled QSO1A shows small, red, circular object outlined with white square. Scale bar in bottom left corner labeled 1 arcsecond shows that image is about 4 arcseconds across and object is about 0.4 arcseconds across. Right: Enlarged view of Little Red Dot overlaid with dumbbell-shaped array of pixels ranging in color from blue to orange. Dumbbell shape is vertical, and pixels are oriented at 45 degrees. Below pixels is blue to orange scale bar showing that color of each pixel is related to gas velocity in kilometers per second. Left side of scale bar grades from blue (labeled 20) to gray (labeled 0). Blue arrow pointing left from 0 to 20 beneath left (blue) side of scale bar is labeled toward. Orange arrow pointing right from 0 to 20 beneath the right (orange) side labeled away. Pixels on lower half of dumbbell shape are blue to gray. Most pixels on upper half are orange to gray, but some are blue.

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Continue reading...Als u denkt dat het niet gekker kan, kan het altijd gekker en in Amsterdam kan het dan vaak nog veel en veel gekker: de vergadering van de gemeenteraad werd (terwijl een insprekende burger een spontane 2 minuten stilte hield voor Gaza, koekkoek) vanmiddag verstoord door een paar gekken met Pallievlaggen en een spandoek waarop de tekst "HANNIE&HAMAS = GEWAPEND VERZET" was geklad. Nou weten wij niet of u een geschiedenisnerd bent, maar tussen Hannie Schaft en Hamas zit dus als u het ons vraagt behoorlijk wat verschil. Hamas doet namelijk dingen als vrouwen verkrachten, kinderen vermoorden en onschuldige burgers onthoofden, terwijl Hannie Schaft zich dan weer bezighield met vooral eh ja niet die dingen. Het kan zijn dat ze een andere Hannie bedoelde, een Hannie die wel jongeren op muziekfestivals doodschiet of kidnapt, maar dan nog blijft het tamelijk walgelijk allemaal. Dat vond Halsema trouwens ook. BIJ1 dan weer niet, dat deelde beelden van de actie met emoji's van spierballen erbij op (en verwijderde die even later weer?). Amsterdam, Amsterdam. We zijn weer eens: teleurgesteld maar niet verrast.
UPDATE: Totale leipheimer Angelo Delsen (SP) wilde de twee minuten stilte, die was onderbroken, alsnog in zijn eigen spreektijd te doen. Daar had de rest van de raad geen zin in.