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In Aug. 2023, JWST captured an exquisitely detailed infrared image of El Gordo galaxy cluster. Two galaxy clusters colliding at a rate of millions of miles per hour make up El Gordo’s enormous mass.
Since July 2022, the James Webb Space Telescope has revolutionized our cosmic understanding, delivering breathtaking images.
The enormous galaxy cluster, El Gordo, has been imaged by Hubble in the past — now, the JWST has offered us a fresh new view. Sitting about 9.7 billion light-years from Earth lies a (very) hefty ...
A recent image from the James Webb Space Telescope shows the most massive galaxy cluster we know of — one so large that it is nicknamed El Gordo, or the fat one. Thought to have a mass of over 2 ...
The JWST PEARLS View of the El Gordo Galaxy Cluster and of the Structure It Magnifies. The Astrophysical Journal , 2023; 952 (1): 81 DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/acd929 ...
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James Webb Space Telescope's 'Warped' El Gordo Galaxy Cluster View Explained - MSNJames Webb Space Telescope has delivered stunning views of the "gravitationally distorted realms" of the El Gordo galaxy cluster, according to Space.com. Credits Image: NASA, ESA, CSA Science ...
The light from “El Anzuelo” came from 10.6 billion years in the past, much farther back in time than light from the galaxy cluster. “El Gordo” contains galaxies whose light is just 6.2 ...
NASA released a new image on Wednesday of a massive galaxy cluster with other distant galaxies in the background. "El Gordo" -- Spanish for "the fat one" -- has existed since the universe was 6.2 ...
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) recently imaged a massive galaxy cluster called “El Gordo” (Spanish for “The Fat One”) that contains hundreds of galaxies and existed when the universe was ...
NASA released a new image on Wednesday of a massive galaxy cluster with other distant galaxies in the background. "El Gordo" -- Spanish for "the fat one" -- has existed since the universe was 6.2 ...
El Gordo is a cluster of hundreds of galaxies that existed when the universe was 6.2 billion years old, making it a “cosmic teenager.” It’s the most massive cluster known to exist at that time.
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