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Are mysterious little red dots spotted by James Webb actually secret black hole stars? Here’s what scientists say

Astronomers first thought these red dots were ancient galaxies. They appeared unusually mature for their early universe age. Scientists believed they formed within 700 million years of the Big Bang.

September 16, 2025 / 16:34 IST
Mysterious Little Red Dots in Space May Be Black Hole Stars (Image: Canva)

Mysterious Little Red Dots in Space May Be Black Hole Stars (Image: Canva)

Scientists have long been puzzled by tiny red dots. These strange spots appear in images from the James Webb Space Telescope. New research now suggests they may not be galaxies. Instead, they could be a new cosmic object class. Could these little red dots be black hole stars?

What Are Little Red Dots?

Astronomers first thought these red dots were ancient galaxies. They appeared unusually mature for their early universe age. Scientists believed they formed within 700 million years of the Big Bang. Their stars seemed old and surprisingly cold. This contradicts previous models of galaxy evolution. Some experts called them "universe breakers" due to their strange features.

Researchers studied the dots carefully throughout 2024. They analysed light from these objects across many wavelengths. In July, their work led to a key discovery. A giant object nicknamed "the Cliff" stood out. Located 12 billion light-years away, it provided new clues.

The Cliff’s light came from a single, large object. It wasn’t many stars clustered together. Instead, it appeared as a huge gas sphere. At the core, a supermassive black hole was feeding. The gas cocoon around it glowed brightly.

Could Little Red Dots Really Be Black Hole Stars?

Joel Leja from Penn State University explained the idea. The red dots may not be galaxies at all. They could be hot, dense gas spheres. These are powered by black holes, not fusion. This theory explains their brightness and size. Galaxies could not grow so massive so fast.

Princeton University’s Bingjie Wang said stars formed unusually here. These processes have never been seen before. The dots’ brightness comes from black holes eating matter. This helps explain early supermassive black hole growth.

Leja added that these objects could be the first stage. They might show how black holes begin growing. Normally, merging smaller black holes takes too long. These black hole stars could speed up the process.

A few of the "little red dot" galaxies identified by the JWST. (Image: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Dale Kocevski, Colby College)

How Does This Change Our Understanding of the Universe?

If true, this challenges previous cosmic evolution theories. Scientists no longer need to explain dense ancient galaxies. Instead, they must study how black hole stars form.

Ann de Graaff from the Max Planck Institute commented. The discovery forced scientists to rethink old models. The extreme properties of the Cliff were key evidence.

The research appeared in the Astronomy & Astrophysics journal. It was published on September 10, 2025. The theory fits most of the data. But scientists will continue studying these objects.

Leja said the universe is full of surprises. He noted that being wrong helps scientists learn more. The team hopes future James Webb studies confirm their theory.

Astronomers are excited to follow these cosmic clues. The real nature of little red dots remains unknown. But this theory could solve a long-standing mystery.

first published: Sep 16, 2025 04:34 pm

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