In case you missed it, the James Webb Space Telescope (which I will be referring to as JWST from now on unless otherwise quoting external article titles) took the sharpest image of the distant universe ever taken and everyone’s excited. So, as I often do, I’ve collected some links on JWST for you to read, in no particular order:
- JWST has found the oldest galaxy we have ever seen in the universe (New Scientist)
- NASA Releases First Images From The James Webb Space (dogonews.com)
- Where is the James Webb Space Telescope now? How far it is from Earth and the best images it has taken so far (i News)
- Behold, Some Hidden Gems from JWST’s First Images (Scientific American)
- James Webb Space Telescope’s stunning ‘Phantom Galaxy’ picture looks like a wormhole (Space.com)
- The James Webb Space Telescope Might Have Spotted the Most Distant Galaxy Ever Seen (Smithsonian Mag)
- JWST keeps breaking its own record for the most distant galaxy ever (New Scientist)
- Red smudge seen by JWST could unlock chemistry of the early universe (New Scientist)
- The Webb Team Just Stealthily Dropped a Picture of Jupiter, And We Can’t Stop Staring (Science Alert)
- Four revelations from the Webb telescope about distant galaxies (Nature.com)
- The James Webb Space Telescope may have just found its first supernova (Inverse)
Space photo related: A snapshot of the Milky Way in all its megapixel glory
Filed under: astrophysics lists outer space stars the Universe