James Webb Space Telescope’s strange little red dots may really be ‘black hole stars’, X-ray data suggests
AI-summarised brief · reviewed before publication
The James Webb Space Telescope discovered mysterious 'little red dots' that may be 'black hole stars', huge gas clouds with a growing supermassive black hole. X-ray data from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory coincides with one of these dots, strengthening the theory. The dots could be a crucial missing link in supermassive black hole and galaxy formation, with implications for cosmology. They are compact, cool, and distant, existing 12 billion years ago.
💡 Why It Matters
- · The discovery may help trace the origins of supermassive black holes and their surrounding galaxies.
- · It also supports the top-down formation theory of supermassive black holes, where they form from the collapse of a vast gas cloud.