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The Baby Boom Galaxy is a starburst galaxy located about 12.477 billion light years away (co-moving distance is 25.08 billion light years). [1] [4] Discovered by NASA's Spitzer Science Center at the California Institute of Technology, the galaxy is the record holder for the brightest starburst galaxy in the very distant universe, with brightness being a measure of its extreme star-formation ...
Intrinsically brightest galaxy Baby Boom Galaxy: Starburst galaxy located 12 billion light-years away [citation needed] Brightest galaxy to the naked eye Large Magellanic Cloud: Apparent magnitude 0.6 This galaxy has high surface brightness combined with high apparent brightness. [citation needed] Intrinsically faintest galaxy Ursa Major III
LAE J095950.99+021219.1 is one of the most distant galaxies discovered as of yet, and has high scientific use, as it has revealed many important details of the early universe and emerging stars.
Sextans B is a fairly bright dwarf irregular galaxy at magnitude 6.6, 4.3 million light-years from Earth. It is part of the Local Group of galaxies. [21] CL J1001+0220 is as of 2016 the most distant-known galaxy cluster at redshift z=2.506, 11.1 billion light-years from Earth. [22]
PGC 29820 (known as JO204) is a spiral galaxy 600 million light-years from the Solar System, in the Sextans constellation. [1] The galaxy is about 120,000 light-years in diameter and is a member of Abell 957, a low-mass galaxy cluster. [2]
Sextans A (also known as UGCA 205) is a small dwarf irregular galaxy.It spans about 5000 light-years across, and is located at 4.3 million light-years away, in the outskirts of the Local Group of galaxies, which includes the Milky Way galaxy, and to which Sextans A may or may not belong.
Cosmos Redshift 7 (also known as COSMOS Redshift 7, Galaxy Cosmos Redshift 7, Galaxy CR7 or CR7) is a high-redshift Lyman-alpha emitter galaxy. At a redshift z = 6.6, [ 1 ] the galaxy is observed as it was about 800 million years after the Big Bang , during the epoch of reionisation . [ 1 ]
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