Astronomers say NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope may have spotted the universe’s first “dark stars,” primordial bodies of hydrogen and helium that bear almost no resemblance to the nuclear fusion-powered stars we’ve come to know.
As detailed in a recent paper published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the team suggests that the very early days of the universe, mere hundreds of millions of years after the Big Bang, may have been home to supermassive dark stars, which were powered by dark matter that eventually led them to self-destruct.
“Supermassive dark stars are extremely bright, giant, yet puffy clouds made primarily out of hydrogen and helium, which are supported against gravitational collapse by the minute amounts of self-annihilating dark matter insi