6 game-changing discoveries the James Webb Space Telescope made in its first year include the earliest black hole, the birth of distant stars, and building blocks of life
The James Webb Space Telescope has been sending us information from outer space for a year.
We've seen stars forming, atmospheres of distant planets, and galaxy formation in the early universe.
It's given us new perspectives on space like we've never seen before.
The one-year anniversary of theJames Webb Space Telescope was this week. This feat of engineering, which took over 20 years to complete, has been beaming down new discoveries that continue to floor scientists, Mark Clampin, the Astrophysics Division Director at NASA, said.
"One of the great things about Webb is every time we see a new result we're all just sitting around the monitors going 'Wow.' I mean, it's really an amazing mission for me when I think about the fact that it can just get people you know, completely engaged every time you see a new result. You never get jaded," Clampin said.
To celebrate this technical feat, here are six of the discoveries that we here at Insider have found most exciting.
The birth of 50 distant stars. Some of them are suns powering protoplanetary discs that could one day form a solar system, light years from our own.
A supermassive black hole with the mass of 9 million suns that predates any scientists had ever discovered. It's so large and old that scientists grappled with a way to explain it.
In a distant ring of rock, dust, and gas, scientists discovered a chemical called methyl cation for the first time. It's known as a molecular building block of life, and makes up most of the organic material on our planet.
The discovery of hundreds of new galaxies, many of which are from the very early universe.
Sand storms on a planet 235 trillion miles away. Scientists call the countless amounts of little sand particles a "treasure chest" for scientific discovery.
A new view of the pillars of creation shows in detail how star-speckled the dusty region is. Hubble had taken photos of this star-forming region before, which makes for an astonishing side-by-side view of scientific progress.
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