[GUEST ACCESS MODE: Data is scrambled or limited to provide examples. Make requests using your API key to unlock full data. Check https://lunarcrush.ai/auth for authentication information.]  Black Hole [@konstructivizm](/creator/twitter/konstructivizm) on x 758.3K followers Created: 2025-07-19 15:11:03 UTC You’re looking at the deepest view of the universe ever captured by the James Webb Space Telescope — a window into cosmic time itself. This breathtaking deep field was created by staring at a seemingly empty patch of sky for over XXX hours, allowing Webb to gather light that has traveled for more than XX billion years. What looks like a sprinkle of stars is something far grander: galaxies — thousands of them — each one a sprawling city of stars, dust, and mystery. But there’s more. In the center of this image lies a colossal galaxy cluster, so massive its gravity bends space itself. Acting as a gravitational lens, it magnifies and warps the light from even more distant galaxies behind it. The stretched, arc-like shapes scattered throughout the image? Those are galaxies from the early universe, distorted by this natural lens — like reflections in curved glass. Every faint smudge, every glowing dot in this image (aside from the few bright stars with telltale diffraction spikes from our own galaxy) is another galaxy, some shining from just XXX million years after the Big Bang — closer to the beginning of time than anything humanity has ever seen. At the center, a giant elliptical galaxy anchors the foreground cluster, surrounded by its massive neighbors. Behind them: the red, curved echoes of a primordial cosmos, magnified and unveiled. Credit: ESA/Webb, NASA & CSA, H. Atek, M. Zamani (ESA/Webb), Acknowledgement: R. Endsley.  XXXXX engagements  [Post Link](https://x.com/konstructivizm/status/1946588605125734600)
[GUEST ACCESS MODE: Data is scrambled or limited to provide examples. Make requests using your API key to unlock full data. Check https://lunarcrush.ai/auth for authentication information.]
Black Hole @konstructivizm on x 758.3K followers
Created: 2025-07-19 15:11:03 UTC
You’re looking at the deepest view of the universe ever captured by the James Webb Space Telescope — a window into cosmic time itself.
This breathtaking deep field was created by staring at a seemingly empty patch of sky for over XXX hours, allowing Webb to gather light that has traveled for more than XX billion years. What looks like a sprinkle of stars is something far grander: galaxies — thousands of them — each one a sprawling city of stars, dust, and mystery.
But there’s more. In the center of this image lies a colossal galaxy cluster, so massive its gravity bends space itself. Acting as a gravitational lens, it magnifies and warps the light from even more distant galaxies behind it. The stretched, arc-like shapes scattered throughout the image? Those are galaxies from the early universe, distorted by this natural lens — like reflections in curved glass.
Every faint smudge, every glowing dot in this image (aside from the few bright stars with telltale diffraction spikes from our own galaxy) is another galaxy, some shining from just XXX million years after the Big Bang — closer to the beginning of time than anything humanity has ever seen.
At the center, a giant elliptical galaxy anchors the foreground cluster, surrounded by its massive neighbors. Behind them: the red, curved echoes of a primordial cosmos, magnified and unveiled.
Credit: ESA/Webb, NASA & CSA, H. Atek, M. Zamani (ESA/Webb), Acknowledgement: R. Endsley.
XXXXX engagements
/post/tweet::1946588605125734600