
Webb telescope stares deeper into space than ever, revealing warped light from galaxies born near the dawn of time
PARIS, May 28 — The James Webb space telescope's deepest view of a single target yet depicts spinning arcs of light that are galaxies from the universe's distant past, the European Space Agency said Tuesday.
The new image took the world's most powerful telescope more than 120 hours to capture, making it the longest Webb has ever focused on a single target.
It is also 'Webb's deepest gaze on a single target to date', the European Space Agency (ESA) said in a statement, making the image one of the deepest ever captured of the cosmos.
At the bright centre of the image is a massive cluster of galaxies called Abell S1063, which is 4.5 billion light years from Earth.
But it is not the true target.
Such huge celestial objects can bend the light of things behind them, creating a kind of magnifying glass called a gravitational lens.
Therefore the 'warped arcs' spinning around the Abell S1063 are what really interest scientists, the ESA said in a statement.
Because looking into distant space also means looking back in time, scientists hope to learn how the first galaxies formed during a period known as the Cosmic Dawn, when the universe was only a few million years old.
The image includes nine separate shots of different near-infrared wavelengths of light, the ESA said.
Since coming online in 2022, the Webb telescope has ushered in a new era of scientific breakthroughs.
It has also revealed that galaxies in the early universe are far bigger than scientists expected, leading some to suspect there might be something wrong with our understanding of the cosmos. — AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Free Malaysia Today
3 hours ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Norris wins ‘dream' maiden Monaco Grand Prix
McLaren driver Lando Norris celebrates after winning the Monaco Grand Prix today. (AP pic) MONACO : Lando Norris won his maiden Monaco Grand Prix today to close the gap on his McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri in the battle for the 2025 drivers' world title. Ferrari's Charles Leclerc took second with Piastri completing the podium in the eighth race of the season. Norris closed to within three points of Piastri after adding the jewel in the F1 calendar to his season-opening win in Australia. Four-time reigning world champion Max Verstappen took fourth with Lewis Hamilton in the other Ferrari rounding out the top five. 'Monaco, baby! It's a dream' Norris exclaimed over the team radio, after becoming the first McLaren driver to win on the sinuous streets of the Principality since Hamilton in 2008. 'It feels amazing, it's a long gruelling race. An amazing weekend with pole, with today. This is what we dream of, this is what I did dream of as a kid,' beamed the 25-year-old. He was pushed hard to the end of the gruelling and at times chaotic afternoon in the Monaco sunshine by Leclerc, who took second, 3.131s behind. 'Lando did a better job and he deserves to win. It is above our expectations here, I thought we would struggle to be in the top 10 so it has been a good weekend, but I wish I'd won,' said the Monaco-born Leclerc. Piastri rued a tricky time in qualifying yesterday. 'I got close but not close enough, and you run around here where you started,' said the Australian. Witness football history in Malaysia as Manchester United take on the Asean All-Stars – it's the clash you can't afford to miss. Book your seat now at before they're gone!


Malay Mail
4 hours ago
- Malay Mail
From Burkina to Belgium: Fighting for women's rights from the hard-right bench
BRUSSELS, May 30 — When Assita Kanko was 10 years old, she pictured herself as president of her native Burkina Faso—with a mission to stamp out female genital mutilation, and further women's rights. As it turned out, she sits as a Belgian lawmaker in the ranks of the hard-right in the European Parliament, and says that suits her just fine. The 44-year-old says she feels at home among the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) -- one of three groups in the assembly's far-right bloc, whose influence has grown steadily since elections last year. As one of three EU lawmakers from the Flemish nationalist N-VA party, she rubs shoulders in the ECR with around 20 other outfits including Giorgia Meloni's post-fascist Brothers of Italy, and Poland's PiS. She also crossed paths with Meloni at the inauguration of Donald Trump—where they were both handpicked, as likeminded European politicians, to welcome the US leader back to office. Despite divergences with some ECR members on 'ethical' issues, Kanko pushes back at criticism of her decision to join the N-VA, a staunchly conservative party with a tough line on immigration. 'The idea that a black woman cannot also be right-wing is outrageous,' she told AFP. 'I want the right to think and I take that right to think, I don't ask permission.' Fighting for women's emancipation has been a cornerstone of her life in politics, she says. Born in Godyr, Burkina Faso, in 1980, Kanko was subjected to female genital mutilation at the age of five—like three quarters of women in the country. She shared her trauma from the experience in a 2013 book, the first of four she has written about gender equality. 'If my mother had had means of her own, I am convinced I would not have been circumcised,' she said. 'Today I am a very independent woman—and no one would dare mutilate my daughter. That has to be the goal.' EU being 'trampled' A 'top of the class' high-school student in Burkina Faso—in her own words—Kanko left to study in the Netherlands in 2001. From there she would move to Belgium—where speaking both Dutch and French proved a boon to her career, in the private sector then as a municipal official in a district of Brussels. Fast-forward to 2018, and Kanko decided to jump ship, leaving the centre-right MR party for the N-VA—the political home of Belgium's current prime minister, Bart De Wever. 'I feel unstoppable, free and proud to be a new Flemish woman,' she explained on the party's website at the time. Kanko describes herself as pro-business, as a sovereigntist—attached to the role of national governments within the EU—and as a fervent Atlanticist. That's how she explains her decision to attend the swearing-in of a US president who has made clear his disdain for the European Union—which he says was founded to 'screw' the United States. 'The United States is a partner we cannot do without,' she said. 'We have to form a bloc to defend Western values in the world.' But Kanko also warns that 'unless we believe in our own power, our own priority and strategies, Donald Trump will walk all over us.' As it stands—with a transatlantic trade war brewing and US security support in question—she considers 'the European Union today is being trampled underfoot—and not just by the United States.' 'It's trampled on by countries in the Middle East too, trampled on by China, trampled on by Russia, trampled on by radicals living on our own territories,' argued Kanko—who was raised in a Muslim culture but did not adopt the faith, and sees Islamic extremism as a threat. In the EU parliament, Kanko has focused on security and border control—and has sought to spotlight a report sounding the alarm about the Muslim Brotherhood as a threat to secularism and women's rights in France and beyond. Kanko wants to see the organisation investigated at European level. 'We need to wake up,' she told fellow lawmakers in parliament recently, accusing the brotherhood of 'indoctrinating children' and 'treating women as inferior.' — AFP


Free Malaysia Today
12 hours ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Zverev survives De Jong drop shot bonanza to advance
The 28-year-old said he felt very comfortable once he found his rhythm. (AP pic) PARIS : Third seed Alexander Zverev had to chase down dozens of drop shots from sprightly Dutchman Jesper de Jong before earning a 3-6 6-1 6-2 6-3 victory on Thursday to advance to the French Open third round. The 28-year-old Zverev, a finalist in Paris last year and looking for his first Grand Slam title, found himself a break down with De Jong, ranked 88th in the world, who initially matched the German's baseline power punch for punch. De Jong, bidding to become the first Dutch player to record a win over a top-three player on any clay tournament in 25 years, quickly added drop shots to his arsenal to land the first set. 'It wasn't the best set of tennis, the first,' Zverev said in a post-match interview. 'I am still having chances not playing great. Once I found my rhythm, I felt very comfortable.' 'I am happy about my level. He played a fantastic match also. I hope I can continue playing great tennis and we will see what I can achieve.' At least a semi-finalist in the past four French Opens, Zverev remained composed and twice broke his opponent to bag the second set. De Jong, however, increased his drop shot rate dramatically – even hitting three on consecutive points in the first game of the third set – to force the tall Zverev out of his comfort zone at the baseline. The world number three gradually adapted to this play, however, chasing down drop shot number 26 to earn a break point at 2-2 in the third set. He converted it to take control and never looked back. With De Jong gradually running out of steam and his error count rising sharply, Zverev powered to two more breaks and a 4-0 lead to break his opponent's resistance and he sealed the win when De Jong sank another drop shot into the net. Zverev will next play the winner of the all-Italian clash between Matteo Arnaldi and Flavio Cobolli.