The James Webb Space Telescope finds a jeweled ring in the cosmos

A blurry teal colored gas ring in black space features three bright shining orange orbs at its crown. A blue light dimly shines from the ring's center, and a paler small dot also shines on the right side of the image.
Gravitational lensing from an elliptical galaxy creates an arc with three bright spots on the top representing a duplicate view of a single quasar called RX J1131-1231, located six billion light-years from Earth. (Image credit: ESA/Webb, NASA & CSA, A. Nierenberg)

A sparkling jeweled ring, created through a cosmic phenomenon called gravitational lensing, has been imaged by the James Webb Space Telescope. 

The new image captures a distant quasar known as RX J1131-1231, which lies about 6 billion light-years from Earth. The powerful gravitational field of a nearby elliptical galaxy, located in the foreground of the image, warps the light of the quasar — which is an extremely luminous active galactic nucleus (AGN) — creating a bright arc and duplicate views of the object, ultimately procuring a visual that looks like gemstones on a ring. 

Quasars are powered by large amounts of gas and dust falling into a galaxy's supermassive black hole, causing the region to shine very brightly. The effects of gravitational lensing, which occurs when a massive object, like a galaxy, bends the light from a more distant source, allow astronomers to study regions close to the black hole part of distant quasars, according to a statement from the European Space Agency (ESA). 

"Measurements of the X-ray emission from quasars can provide an indication of how fast the central black hole is spinning and this gives researchers important clues about how black holes grow over time, "ESA officials said in the statement. 

Related: See amazing images from James Webb Space Telescope's 1st year gazing deep into the cosmos (photos)

The elliptical galaxy creating the gravitational lens in the new JWST image appears as a small blue dot in the center of the ring. The galaxy acts as a natural telescope, magnifying the light from the more distant quasar, which is otherwise too far away to study. 

"If a black hole grows primarily from collisions and mergers between galaxies, it should accumulate material in a stable disc, and the steady supply of new material from the disc should lead to a rapidly spinning black hole," ESA officials said in the statement. "On the other hand, if the black hole grew through many small accretion episodes, it would accumulate material from random directions. Observations have indicated that the black hole in this particular quasar is spinning at over half the speed of light, which suggests that this black hole has grown via mergers, rather than pulling material in from different directions." 

The new image was taken using the JWST's Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) as part of a larger study of dark matter and its distribution in the universe. With these  recent observations, and previous views from other telescopes, RX J1131-1231 is considered one of the best lensed quasars discovered to date.

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Samantha Mathewson
Contributing Writer

Samantha Mathewson joined Space.com as an intern in the summer of 2016. She received a B.A. in Journalism and Environmental Science at the University of New Haven, in Connecticut. Previously, her work has been published in Nature World News. When not writing or reading about science, Samantha enjoys traveling to new places and taking photos! You can follow her on Twitter @Sam_Ashley13. 

  • skynr13
    It's just amazing that this BH spins at half the speed of light! And I thought that matter had trouble reaching anywhere near that speed.
    Reply
  • Classical Motion
    One half the speed of light is peanuts. In the old outer reaches whole galaxies are traveling at multiple speeds of light........due to space expansion. Superluminal velocities are common in every direction. All around the universe.

    But we've never seen any of this locally in our galaxy or neighboring galaxies. Only the very far ones. And they are all moving away from us like we were infected. It's quite a ponderment.

    Maybe that's why we haven't had any visitors. The current of space is too strong.

    We are the Antarctic of the universe. And no one can return.
    Reply
  • Classical Motion
    Imagine the galaxies going east at 20 times c(pure guess) and galaxies to the west going at 20 times c. That's pretty quick between them. The same with the north and south.

    AT those velocities......imagine how fast the area, and then the volume, is multiplying. That volume is between us and them. Not behind us.

    This is big doings. That's amazing. It's an amazing growth rate. An ongoing creation of some sort. A creation of distance, not mass.

    What size would result from such a 13 billion yr. expansion? It's a whopper.

    If long reaching gravity is due to mass density, this universe is losing density at a very high rate.
    Reply
  • skynr13
    Classical Motion said:
    One half the speed of light is peanuts. In the old outer reaches whole galaxies are traveling at multiple speeds of light........due to space expansion. Superluminal velocities are common in every direction. All around the universe.

    But we've never seen any of this locally in our galaxy or neighboring galaxies. Only the very far ones. And they are all moving away from us like we were infected. It's quite a ponderment.

    Maybe that's why we haven't had any visitors. The current of space is too strong.

    We are the Antarctic of the universe. And no one can return.
    I have heard this before in many science articles, but since the idea of it defies the laws of the Standard Model, I won't believe it's true. Light cannot go faster than the speed of light. And the same is true to me for the expansion of the BB. There is something off with the science measurements.
    And in your second comment where you talk about 20 times the speed of light this way and that, scientists have determined the expansion at these great distances was only 2-3 times the speed of light.
    Reply
  • Pogo
    When black holes like that merge I wonder how ‘stretchy’ they get, like stars falling into one.
    Reply