The James Webb Area Telescope and different worldwide observatories have noticed a 13-billion-year-old supernova. On Tuesday, the European Area Company (ESA) introduced the sighting of a gamma-ray burst from a star that exploded when the Universe was solely 730 million years previous. The Webb telescope even detected the supernova’s host galaxy.
Earlier than this statement, the oldest recorded supernova was from when the Universe was 1.8 billion years previous. That is a distinction of greater than a billion years.
You may see the gamma-ray burst within the picture beneath. It is the tiny crimson smudge on the middle of the zoomed-in field on the correct.

The tiny crimson splotch within the middle of the crop field is the oldest factor you have seen. (NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, A. Levan (IMAPP))
“This statement additionally demonstrates that we are able to use Webb to search out particular person stars when the Universe was solely 5 % of its present age,” co-author Andrew Levan wrote within the ESA’s press launch. “There are solely a handful of gamma-ray bursts within the final 50 years which were detected within the first billion years of the Universe. This explicit occasion could be very uncommon and really thrilling.”
Researchers realized that the 13-billion-year-old explosion shared many traits with fashionable, close by supernovae. Whereas that won’t sound stunning, scientists anticipated a extra profound distinction. That is as a result of early stars seemingly had fewer heavy components, had been extra huge and did not reside as lengthy. “We went in with open minds,” co-author Nial Tanvir mentioned. “And lo and behold, Webb confirmed that this supernova seems to be precisely like fashionable supernovae.”
Detection was a world relay race. First, NASA’s Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory famous the X-ray supply’s location. (That helped Webb to make subsequent observations that decided its distance). Then, the Nordic Optical Telescope on the Canary Islands in Spain made observations indicating that the gamma ray is likely to be very distant. Hours later, the European Southern Observatory’s Very Massive Telescope in Chile estimated its age: 730 million years after the Massive Bang. All of this occurred in beneath 17 hours, in line with the ESA.
The workforce behind the statement has been accredited to spend extra time with Webb finding out gamma-ray bursts from the early Universe — and the galaxies behind them. “That glow will assist Webb see extra and provides us a ‘fingerprint’ of the galaxy,” Levan predicted.


