As early as 2012 scientists predicted that the Hubble telescope would see
something they called a "Dark Star".

Observing supermassive dark stars with James Webb Space Telescope
<https://academic.oup.com/mnras/article/422/3/2164/1043351?login=false>

They theorized in the early universe Dark Matter, whatever it is, must've
been much more densely concentrated than it is today, and if Dark Matter
particles are their own antiparticles as many think then their annihilation
could provide a heat source, they could keeping star in thermal and
hydrodynamic equilibrium and prevent it from collapsing. They hypothesized
something they called a "Dark Star '', it would be a star with a million
times the mass of the sun and would be composed almost entirely of hydrogen
and helium but with 0.1% Dark Matter.  A Dark Star would not be dark but
would be 10 billion times as bright as the sun and be powered by dark
matter not nuclear fusion.

Astronomers were puzzled by pictures taken with the James Webb telescope
that they interpreted to be bright galaxies just 320 million years after
the Big Bang that were much brighter than most expected them to be that
early in the universe, a recent paper by the same people that theorized
existence of Dark Stars claim they could solve this puzzle. They claim 3 of
the most distant objects that the Webb telescope has seen are point
sources, as you'd expect from a Dark Star, and their spectrum is consistent
with what they predicted a Dark Star should look like. With a longer
exposure and a more detailed spectrum, Webb should be able to tell for sure
if it's a single Dark Star or an early galaxy made up of tens of millions
of population 3 stars.

Supermassive Dark Star candidates seen by JWST
<https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2305762120>

John K Clark    See what's on my new list at  Extropolis
<https://groups.google.com/g/extropolis>

3vy

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