Wat zijn die kleine rode stipjes? Het is een vraag die astronomen al sinds de lancering van de Webb Space
#ChandraRöntgentelescoop #JongeHeelal #LittleRedDots #WebbSpaceTelescope #ZwarteGaten
https://www.kuuke.nl/de-stipjes-die-de-regels-braken/
Science excites me in a way very few things can. Tell me how things work.
JWST has been finding hundreds of strange compact blobs 12 billion light-years away — red in optical light, blue in UV. Formed ~600 million years after the Big Bang. Nobody knows what they are.
I love that.
#JWST #Astrophysics #Astronomy #LittleRedDots #Science
https://www.universetoday.com/articles/the-jwst-makes-some-headway-understanding-little-red-dots

Researchers using the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope have confirmed an actively growing supermassive black hole within a galaxy just 570 million years after the Big Bang. Part of a class of small, very distant galaxies that have mystified astronomers, CANUCS-LRD-z8.6 represents a vital piece of this puzzle that challenges existing theories about the formation of galaxies and black holes in the early Universe. The discovery connects early black holes with the luminous quasars we observe today.

Little Red Dots and Their Progenitors from Direct Collapse Black Holes, Jeon, Junehyoung, Liu, Boyuan, Bromm, Volker, Fujimoto, Seiji, Taylor, Anthony J., Kokorev, Vasily, Larson, Rebecca L., Chisholm, John, Finkelstein, Steven L., Kocevski, Dale D.
#UniWien:
"
Die kalte und staubige Seite der Galaxienentstehung
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"Neue Simulationen bestätigen kosmologisches Standardmodell – COLIBRE macht Galaxien-Entwicklung auch hörbar"
14.4.2026
#Astrophysik #COLIBRE #Galaxie #Gas #JWST #Kosmologie #LittleRedDots #LCDM #SchwarzesLoch #Simulation #Standardmodell #Staub #Universum
Then it would seem (to novice me) that the collapse of a gigantic star tossing off unusual elements found in globular clusters would form the black hole in the center of larger galaxies which dwarf galaxies travel with. The spin of the gigantic star would seed the spin of the black hole and its emergent galaxy.

Record Breaking Massive Black Holes Challenge Modern Models - YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=58K_z0MeDdk

Weekly Update from the Open Journal of Astrophysics – 24/01/2026
It’s Saturday once more so time for another update of activity at the Open Journal of Astrophysics. Since the last update we have published a further three papers, bringing the number in Volume 9 (2026) to 14 and the total so far published by OJAp up to 462. This week was slightly affected by a Federal holiday in the USA on January 19th; there were no arXiv announcements the following day.
I will continue to include the posts made on our Mastodon account (on Fediscience) to encourage you to visit it. Mastodon is a really excellent service, and a more than adequate replacement for X/Twitter which nobody should be using.
The first paper to report this week is “The Properties of Little Red Dot Galaxies in the ASTRID Simulation” by Patrick LaChance, Rupert A. C. Croft, Tiziana Di Matteo & Yihao Zhou (Carnegie Mellon U.), Fabio Pacucci (Harvard-Smithsonian CfA), Yueying Ni (U. Michigan Ann Arbor), Nianyi Chen (Princeton U.) and Simeon Bird (UC Riverside), all based in the USA. This paper was published on Monday 19th January 2026 in the folder Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics; the study analyses mock observations of “Little Red Dot” galaxies created from the ASTRID simulation, having high stellar masses and containing massive black holes; not all features match real observations.
The overlay is here:
You can find the officially accepted version on arXiv here and the announcement on Fediverse here:
https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115921308789068125
The second paper is “Angular bispectrum of matter number counts in cosmic structures” by Thomas Montandon (U. Montpellier, France), Enea Di Dio (U. Genève, Switzerland), Cornelius Rampf (Ruđer Bošković Institute, Croatia) and Julian Adamek (U. Zürich, Switzerland). This was published on Wednesday January 21st, also in the folder Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics. This paper presents thee first full-sky computation of the angular bispectrum in second-order perturbation theory, offering insights into the Universe’s initial conditions, gravity, and cosmological parameters. The results align well with simulations.
The overlay for this one is here:
The official version of the paper can be found on arXiv here and the Fediverse announcement here:
https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115932387870297108
Next, and last for this week, we have “The Kinematic Properties of TŻO Candidate HV 11417 with Gaia DR3” by Anna J. G. O’Grady (Carnegie Mellon University, USA). This was published on Wednesday 21st January 2026 in the folder Solar and Stellar Astrophysics. This work uses updated data to confirm that HV 11417, a potential Thorne-Żytkow Object, is probably part of the Small Magellanic Cloud and qualifies as a runaway star.
The overlay is here:
The official version can be found on arXiv here and the Fediverse announcement is here:
https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115932444483985982
That concludes the update for this week. I will do another next Saturday.
#angularBispectrum #arXiv250105422v3 #arXiv251123368v2 #AstridSimulations #AstrophysicsOfGalaxies #bispectrum #CosmologyAndNonGalacticAstrophysics #DiamondOpenAccess #DiamondOpenAccessPublishing #GaiaDR3 #largeScaleStructureOfTheUniverse #LittleRedDots #OpenAccess #OpenAccessPublishing #OpenJournalOfAstrophysics #SolarAndStellarAstrophysics #TheOpenJournalOfAstrophysics #ThorneŻytkowObjects
On the cover of Nature's new issue: Little Red Dots - Enigmatic objects in the distant Universe could be young black holes in a cocoon of gas.
Credit image: The CEERS Survey/The JADES Survey/PRIMER/The UNCOVER survey/Dawn JWST Archive
https://www.nature.com/nature/volumes/649/issues/8097 @nature.com
#Nature #Astrophysic #Astronomy #galaxies #JWST #Webb #Astrodon #blackholes #science #news #LittleRedDots #Universe