The bright galaxy takes the scientist to the early universe

On June 30, astronomers said they "trapped" light from a galaxy 770 million years ago. This finding helps explain some of the universe at the beginning.

Picture 1 of The bright galaxy takes the scientist to the early universe
The image of a galaxy has a giant black hole in the middle - Photo: AFP

This galaxy is called Quasar , which is characterized by very bright light and contains a giant black hole at the core.

Previously, the oldest quintet we ever saw was at 870 million years after the Big Bang, the explosion was supposed to happen about 13.7 billion years ago. But now this record has been defeated when European astronomers discovered that electromagnetic radiation was dispersed only 770 million years after the advent of the universe.

"Standardization is an important exploration in the early days of the early universe. This is a rare object to help us understand how black holes are , " said Stephen Warren, head of astrophysics at Imperial College London . giant developed in a few hundred million years after the Big Bang 'explosion .

Measurements show that the giant cosmic black holes of the quasar have a mass of about 2 billion solar masses, a size that is incompatible with current theory.

According to the popular hypothesis, the giant cosmic black hole typically takes billions of years to form when slowly absorbing the surrounding environmental material.