- Early universe’s ‘little red dots’ may be black hole stars
The little red dots, astronomers say, may be an entirely new type of object: a colossal ball of bright, hot gas, larger than the Solar System, powered not by nuclear fusion, but by a black hole
- The Universe’s First “Little Red Dots” May Be a New Kind of . . .
Mysterious red dots may be a peculiar cosmic hybrid between a star and a black hole
- Mysterious Little Red Dots Revealed as Birth Cries of Black Holes
When the James Webb Telescope first observed mysterious Little Red Dots in the early universe, astronomers looked on in disbelief These strange objects, they realised, were distant, bright and strangely, unexpectedly, bafflingly red
- Little Red Dots: Stars or Black Holes? - NASA Space News
These tiny, compact galaxies challenge our understanding of galaxy formation and black hole evolution in the early universe Let’s dive into the mystery of these "Little Red Dots" and explore what makes them so intriguing
- The six little red dots that nearly broke the Universe
The problems started with six little red dots Six small fuzzy spots, among thousands of others, were enough to suddenly bring everything into question The dots appeared in images captured by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) and, whichever way astronomers and astrophysicists looked at them, they just didn't make sense
- Little Red Dots in Early Universe Might Be Black Holes . . .
One of these is the appearance of small, highly redshifted objects nicknamed "little red dots (LRDs) " We aren't entirely sure what they are, but a new study points to an answer One of the things we do know about these objects is that their spectra are highly broadened by motional Doppler
- Are the JWSTs Little Red Dots Actually Supermassive Black . . .
New research examines the idea that they're actually stars, suggesting that they're actually the progenitors for supermassive black holes
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