will JWST lead to more 'fringe' scienceperhaps thanks to JWST news headlines about more people with 'new theories'New physics or universe may be older than previously thought
A new class of supermassive black holes embedded in a thick gas shell could explain small red dots in images from the James Webb Space Telescope
In the end, the researchers conclude that they're almost certainly seeing a new population of galaxies. They could be a new kind of AGN that are in very faint galaxies, "low-luminosity and hostless," as they describe it in their paper. They could be a new kind of star-forming galaxy.To find out for sure, two things are needed: a larger sample of these 'platypuses', and higher-resolution spectra."Regardless of their exact nature, this population of point-like, narrow-line objects deserve further investigations, and deeper, medium-resolution spectroscopy will be critical in the future diagnostics," the authors write in their paper's conclusion.The JWST has a track record of revealing things in the early Universe that are forcing us to rethink what we know. That's the point of building it and launching it. To discover things that force researchers to work harder to explain them, thereby advancing our scientific horizons.