Earendel

Massive hot B-type star · WHL0137-LS
Most distant individual star ever seen

The most distant individual star ever seen. Its light set out about 12.9 billion years ago, when the universe was a twentieth of its present age, and reaches us only because a massive galaxy cluster bends and magnifies it into view. A single hot, massive star glimpsed across almost the whole history of the cosmos.

Illustration from its stellar type, not a photograph

12.9 billion ly
from Earth
z = 6.2
redshift

Its light has been travelling 12.9 billion years to reach us, so you see Earendel as it was 12.9 billion years ago, early in the history of the universe.

Source · Welch et al. 2022, Nature 603, 815 · View on Wikidata

It lives in
the Sunrise Arc galaxy, gravitationally lensed
Too distant to catalog as a galaxy of its own; visible only because a closer mass bends its light toward us.
Worlds in the same direction on the sky
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