
James Webb Saw The Black Hole That Breaks the Universe
For decades, cosmologists assumed they had black hole formation figured out. Stars collapse, black holes grow slowly, and by the time the universe is a billion years old — maybe, just maybe — you get something truly massive. Then James Webb turned on. 🔭💥
JWST has now found supermassive black holes — billions of times the mass of our Sun — already fully formed just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang. Not slowly growing. Not seeds. Fully. Formed. The standard model of black hole formation gives them billions of years to reach that size. The universe hadn't even celebrated its first birthday.
This isn't just an anomaly. It's a crisis. And James Webb may have just found the first real clue to how it happened.
🔬 In this video:
The supermassive black hole problem: why finding them so early breaks known physics
What JWST detected in the early universe that scientists couldn't explain
The "seeding" mystery — how do black holes go from stellar remnants to billions of solar masses in record time?
Direct Collapse Black Holes (DCBHs): the radical theory JWST may have just confirmed
Super-Eddington accretion: how black holes could grow faster than physics says they should
The connection to the Lambda-CDM cosmological crisis — this isn't an isolated anomaly
What solving the early black hole mystery means for our understanding of cosmic origins
The Big Bang left behind a universe that should have taken billions of years to build its giants. James Webb is finding those giants already in place — and the explanation may force us to rewrite not just black hole physics, but the entire story of how the cosmos came to be. 🌌
#universe, #perfect universe, #galaxy #Mysteries
