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Scientists detect 'naked' black hole that's heavier than its host galaxy ‪—‬ pointing to exotic new processes in the early universe

May 27, 2026 5 min read views
Scientists detect 'naked' black hole that's heavier than its host galaxy ‪—‬ pointing to exotic new processes in the early universe
  1. Space
  2. Astronomy
  3. Black Holes
Scientists detect 'naked' black hole that's heavier than its host galaxy ‪—‬ pointing to exotic new processes in the early universe

Astronomers weighed a black hole in a "little red dot" discovered by the James Webb telescope. They found it to be so overmassive that it may have formed before its host galaxy had a chance to develop.

Shreejaya Karantha's avatar By Shreejaya Karantha published 27 May 2026 in News

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A view of Pandora’s Cluster (Abell 2744) in deep space. The galaxy cluster Abell 2744, imaged here by the James Webb Space Telescope, magnifies the light of some of the most distant galaxies and black holes in the known universe. New research uncovers the secrets of one such black hole. (Image credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, I. Labbe (Swinburne University of Technology), R. Bezanson (University of Pittsburgh), A. Pagan (STScI)
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Astronomers have found the most extreme example yet of a black hole outweighing its own galaxy, and it may be hiding clues to how the supermassive black holes seen today formed in the early universe.

In a new study, astronomers directly measured the mass of a black hole sitting in a "little red dot" seen when the universe was just 700 million years old. The results suggest that the black hole is much too massive for its host galaxy ‪—‬ meaning it may have formed before the galaxy itself had a chance to develop.

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Series of red bubble looking spheres over a dark, starry background with four white cutout squares in front enlarging four of the bubbles to show glowing balls of red light in each of the bubbles.

The James Webb Space Telescope has detected dozens of peculiar ‘little red dots’ in the early universe. The new study hints that some of them may be ancient black holes that took shape even before galaxies formed around them.

(Image credit: Bangzheng "Tom" Sun) What to read next
  • A "slice" of the cosmic web, as reconstructed through COSMOS-Web data. James Webb telescope reveals largest-ever map of the universe's megastructures
  • A glittering starscape in pink and blue taken by the Webb telescope 48 jaw-dropping James Webb telescope photos
  • Illustration of a black hole with bent jets pulling stellar material away from a giant blue star The first black hole ever discovered is spewing 'dancing jets' at half the speed of light

The James Webb Space Telescope’s infrared instruments can see farther and fainter light sources than any observatory in history.

(Image credit: NASA)Related stories

  • Mysterious 'little red dots' discovered by James Webb telescope may be the first stars in the universe on the verge of collapse
  • James Webb telescope zooms in on a black hole that could reveal the truth about 'little red dots'
  • The James Webb telescope found hundreds of 'little red dots' in the ancient universe. We still don't know what they are.
Article Sources

Juodžbalis, I., Marconcini, C., D’Eugenio, F. et al. A direct black-hole mass measurement in a little red dot at high redshift. Nature 653, 1017–1021 (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-026-10579-4

TOPICS James Webb Space Telescope Shreejaya KaranthaShreejaya KaranthaLive Science contributor

Shreejaya Karantha is a science writer specializing in astronomy, covering topics such as the sun, planetary science, stellar evolution, black holes, and early universe cosmology. Based in India, she works as a writer and research specialist at The Secrets of the Universe, where she contributes to scripts for research-based and explainer videos. Shreejaya holds a bachelor's degree in science and a master's degree in physics with a specialization in astrophysics.

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