Coming from only 280 million years after the big explosion, or 98 % of the cosmic history, this new new galaxy is a mystery, but not a mirage.
Regardless of our belief that we understand the universe, there is always something new to discover. After all, astronomy is the study of the universe as we note to be, and while we build superior tools and telescopes, we are obligated to observe details, things and even phenomena that cannot be detected by tools of previous generations. Often, we only had the appearance of Telescope Telescope – including NASA’s Hubble Telescope – in understanding the shape of the universe. Now, here in the twenties of the twentieth century, it is the JMST Telescope (JWST) that takes us to beyond Hubble’s previous borders, discovering faded, most distant, most primitive, and smaller creatures in the universe more than ever.
In 2022, before the start of JWST scientific operations, we had only one jar of the first 500 million years of cosmic history: GN-Z11, discovered with the Hubble Space Telescope. There were many other candidates for the super -Galaxy, but they were only: the candidates. It will take a superior tool, such as JWST, to find others, as well as to confirm or refute those we have already.