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Why do some James Webb Space Telescope images show warped and repeated galaxies?

This James Webb Space Telescope deep-field image shows some of the earliest and most distant galaxies ever seen. (Image credit: NASA, ESA, CSA and STScI)

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In July 2022, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) — the most powerful telescope humanity has ever put into space — delivered its first photo, a deep-field image containing thousands of galaxies, many of which were seen as they were in the early universe. What many people didn’t expect was how strangely warped and twisted some of these galaxies would appear. 

These Salvador Dalí-esque galaxies that look like melted taffy aren’t representative of how these objects look in space; it’s an illusion in the JWST images. Another startling aspect of the JWST images, such as the one taken of the massive galaxy cluster RX J2129, is that several galaxies appear at multiple points in the same image. Again, this is an illusion; these galaxies don’t actually have exact doppelgängers. 

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