SUMMARYAstronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope and gravitational lensing have confirmed that an early-Universe “little red dot” called Abell 2744−QSO1 is essentially a naked supermassive black hole with little surrounding galaxy material. The object appears as it was about 700 million years after the Big Bang, offering a rare glimpse into the formation of the earliest black holes and galaxies.

Three images of QSO1 have been created by gravitational lensing.
NASA, ESA, CSA, Lukas Furtak, Alyssa Pagan
arstechnica.com
Three images of QSO1 have been created by gravitational lensing.

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) was designed to give us the ability to look at one of the earliest periods in the evolution of the Universe, a time when some of the earliest stars were putting out enough light to ionize the hydrogen that accounted for almost all of the normal matter present at the time. There were lots of ideas about what we might see, but the Universe is full of surprises.

One of the first surprises was the existence of what picked up the moniker "little red dots," which are exactly what their name suggests. After some initial arguments, it became clear that these were early versions of the supermassive black holes that presently sit at the center of almost every galaxy. Now, gravitational lensing has allowed astronomers to confirm that a little red dot is little more than a supermassive black hole without much in the way of a galaxy around it.

Making a little red dot bigger

The little red dot in question is called Abell 2744−QSO1, and gravitational lensing has both magnified it and caused it to appear three times in the vicinity of the galaxy cluster that did the lensing. Based on details in its spectrum, we're looking at the object as it appeared just 700 million years after the Big Bang.

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