Advertisements In terms of visual impression, the image is a bit underwhelming compared to the first Webb photos released earlier this month. But it’s not about the aesthetics, it’s about scientific significance. This galaxy is estimated to be 13.5 billion years old. For comparison, the birth of our universe is estimated to have happened 3.8 billion years ago. This means that this galaxy could be the oldest one ever detected, from the time our universe was still an astronomic version of a toddler.
Researchers from the Harvard and Smithsonian Center of Astrophysics shared the data about the galaxy called GLASS-z13 in a paper. What’s more, they identified another galaxy called GLASS-z11, which is roughly the same age. The previous record belongs to Hubble with its image of the galaxy called GN-z11. According to NASA, this one shows the as it was 13.4 billion years before. “We found two very compelling candidates for extremely distant galaxies,” Rohan Naidu, one of the Webb researchers, told New Scientist. “If these galaxies are at the distance we think they are, the universe is only a few hundred million years old at that point.” [via Business Insider]