Updated
Updated · MIT News · Jun 8
MIT Astronomers Detect Earliest Flickering Quasar 850 Million Years After Big Bang
Updated
Updated · MIT News · Jun 8

MIT Astronomers Detect Earliest Flickering Quasar 850 Million Years After Big Bang

3 articles · Updated · MIT News · Jun 8

Summary

  • NEOWISE infrared data spanning 14 years revealed the earliest known flickering quasar, with light traced to just 850 million years after the Big Bang.
  • A roughly 20% brightness swing let researchers map the quasar’s accretion disk and showed it was thin and flat rather than the puffier, chaotic structure expected in such an early black hole.
  • That mature-looking disk suggests the rapid, messy growth phase of supermassive black holes may occur even earlier than astronomers can currently observe, deepening the puzzle of how they formed so fast.
  • More than 200 supermassive black holes have already been found within the universe’s first billion years, but this is the first cosmic-dawn quasar seen flickering strongly enough to probe its structure directly.

Insights

Old data revealed a 13-billion-year-old secret. What will next-gen telescopes find in the universe's darkest corners?
Is this ancient 'pancake' black hole a clue to rapid growth, or a cosmic illusion challenging our theories?
If the universe's first giant black holes were born 'mature', how does this rewrite the story of cosmic evolution?

The Earliest Known Flickering Quasar: J0439+1634 Sheds Light on Rapid Black Hole Growth at Cosmic Dawn

Overview

In June 2026, astronomers from MIT and collaborators announced the discovery of J0439+1634, the earliest known flickering quasar. This quasar, dating back 850 million years after the Big Bang, offers a rare look into the universe's infancy, known as the 'cosmic dawn.' For the first time, scientists observed flickering in a quasar from such an early era, revealing dynamic processes around supermassive black holes. This breakthrough is crucial for understanding how these massive black holes grew and how large-scale cosmic structures formed in the early universe.

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