The James Webb Space Telescope has found key chemical fingerprints of supermassive stars just 440 million years after the Big Bang.
The James Webb Space Telescope has discovered the first evidence that millions of supermassive stars up to 10,000 times the mass of the sun may be hiding at the dawn of the universe.
Related: The early universe was crammed with stars 10,000 times the size of our sun, new study suggests Astronomers believe this elemental variety could be explained by the existence of supermassive stars — cosmic giants born in the denser conditions of the early universe that burned their fuel at much higher temperatures, producing heavier elements that subsequently"polluted" smaller infant stars .
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