Right now, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is making the scientific community swoon. The world’s most powerful telescope has discovered evidence of ‘cosmic monsters’ in giant cosmic clusters.
You must be wondering what kind of monsters are these. We can assure you that these giant creatures have nothing to do with science fiction or the bizarre; they say “Supermassive Stars”.
The JWST discovered evidence of these ‘supermassive stars’ in cosmic clusters some 100 million years after the birth of the universe.
What are global clusters?
Almost every galaxy has globular clusters, and our own Milky Way has more than 180 of them.
In addition to being the most massive and oldest star cluster, globular clusters may contain up to one million stars that were born collectively 440 million years after the Big Bang. These stars may also exhibit oddities that are not present in any other stellar collection.
See also: NASA’s most powerful telescope discovers water in mysterious region of space for the first time; trace!
Chemical traces detected by NASA’s billion-dollar telescope provide the first observational support for the rich theory, according to a recent study, indicating that massive stars definitely lurk in stellar clusters.
“Thanks to the data collected by the JWST, we think we have uncovered the first clue to the existence of these extraordinary stars,” said research author Corinne Charbonnel.
These supermassive stars are 5,000 to 10,000 times the mass of the Sun and reach temperatures of 135 million degrees Fahrenheit.
Cover Image: Representative Image
Right now, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is making the scientific community swoon. The world’s most powerful telescope has discovered evidence of ‘cosmic monsters’ in giant cosmic clusters.
You must be wondering what kind of monsters are these. We can assure you that these giant creatures have nothing to do with science fiction or the bizarre; they say “Supermassive Stars”.
The JWST discovered evidence of these ‘supermassive stars’ in cosmic clusters some 100 million years after the birth of the universe.
What are global clusters?
Almost every galaxy has globular clusters, and our own Milky Way has more than 180 of them.
In addition to being the most massive and oldest star cluster, globular clusters may contain up to one million stars that were born collectively 440 million years after the Big Bang. These stars may also exhibit oddities that are not present in any other stellar collection.
See also: NASA’s most powerful telescope discovers water in mysterious region of space for the first time; trace!
Chemical traces detected by NASA’s billion-dollar telescope provide the first observational support for the rich theory, according to a recent study, indicating that massive stars definitely lurk in stellar clusters.
“Thanks to the data collected by the JWST, we think we have uncovered the first clue to the existence of these extraordinary stars,” said research author Corinne Charbonnel.
These supermassive stars are 5,000 to 10,000 times the mass of the Sun and reach temperatures of 135 million degrees Fahrenheit.
Cover Image: Representative Image











