Photos from the James Webb Space Telescope have revealed more than 40 stars within the gravitationally lensed "Dragon Arc" ...
The James Webb Space Telescope captured images of 44 individual stars in a gorgeous portrait of a distant galaxy.
The cutting-edge observatory is charged with seeing some of the earliest visible light, and the recent image achieves a new ...
Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope identified over 40 stars in a galaxy 6.5 billion light-years away, thanks to ...
NASA's James Webb Space Telescope has captured a unique image that revealed 44 individual stars in a galaxy 6.5 billion light ...
A phenomenon called gravitational lensing turned a galaxy into a "hall of mirrors of cosmic proportions," allowing for the discovery.
Looking halfway across the observable universe and expecting to see individual stars is considered a non-starter in astronomy ...
Gravitational lenses have been used previously to resolve individual stars in the distant Universe. Using the microlensing of ...
While the extra-galactic stars provided a microlensing effect, large clusters of dark matter provided a macrolensing effect.
Taking advantage of a cosmic "double lens," astronomers resolved more than 40 individual stars in a galaxy so far away its ...
Astronomers used JWST and gravitational lensing to spot 44 individual stars in a galaxy 6.5 billion light-years away.
Astronomers used NASA's James Webb Space Telescope to reveal 44 stars in a galaxy so far away, its light dates to when the universe was half its age.