The James Webb Space Telescope Feed
The most extensive source of information about James Webb Space Telescope. JWST Feed contains every single piece of data from the telescope, and is updating live every few minutes. Our goal is to make the full JWST data accessible for the public.
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Uchuu-$ν^2$GC galaxies and AGN: Cosmic variance forecasts of high-redshift AGN for JWST, Euclid, and LSST
Seeing sharper and deeper: JWST's first glimpse of the photometric and spectroscopic properties of galaxies in the epoch of reionisation
First Insights into the ISM at $z>8$ with JWST: Possible Physical Implications of a High [O III]$\mathbf{λ4363}$/[O III]$\mathbf{λ 5007}$
Early results from GLASS-JWST. IX: First spectroscopic confirmation of low-mass quiescent galaxies at $z>2$ with NIRISS
Early results from GLASS-JWST. VI: Extreme rest-optical equivalent widths detected in NIRISS Wide Field Slitless Spectroscopy
Early results from GLASS-JWST. IV: Spatially resolved metallicity in a low-mass $z\sim3$ galaxy with NIRISS
Early results from GLASS-JWST. V: the first rest-frame optical size-luminosity relation of galaxies at $z>7$
JWST/NIRCam Observations of Stars and HII Regions in $z\simeq 6-8$ Galaxies: Properties of Star Forming Complexes on 150 pc Scales
A Preview of JWST Metallicity Studies at Cosmic Noon: The First Detection of Auroral [O II] Emission at High Redshift
The Physical Conditions of Emission-Line Galaxies at Cosmic Dawn from JWST/NIRSpec Spectroscopy in the SMACS 0723 Early Release Observations
The chemical enrichment in the early Universe as probed by JWST via direct metallicity measurements at z~8
The evolution of the galaxy UV luminosity function at redshifts z ~ 8-15 from deep JWST and ground-based near-infrared imaging
Revealing Galaxy Candidates out to $z \sim 16$ with JWST Observations of the Lensing Cluster SMACS0723
GLASS | GLASS-JWST NIRCam observations find two new z>10 galaxies and a new record-holder for the most distant source!
GLASS | Astronomers found these two distant galaxies in the same small part of the sky. They estimate that the one on the right is from 300 million years after the Big Bang.
GLASS | A newfound galaxy dubbed GLASS-z13, which is so far away that we see it as it appeared 300 million years after the Big Bang
CEERS | A Long Time Ago in a Galaxy Far, Far Away: A Candidate z ~ 14 Galaxy in Early JWST CEERS Imaging
Early results from GLASS-JWST VIII: An Extremely Magnified Blue Supergiant Star at Redshift 2.65 in the Abell 2744 Cluster Field
First Batch of Candidate Galaxies at Redshifts 11 to 20 Revealed by the James Webb Space Telescope Early Release Observations
Early Results from GLASS-JWST. I: Confirmation of Lensed $z\geqslant7$ Lyman-Break Galaxies Behind the Abell 2744 Cluster With NIRISS
First Peek with JWST/NIRCam Wide-Field Slitless Spectroscopy: Serendipitous Discovery of a Strong [O III]/H$α$ Emitter at $z=6.11$
Rest-frame near-infrared sizes of galaxies at cosmic noon: objects in JWST's mirror are smaller than they appeared
Panic! At the Disks: First Rest-frame Optical Observations of Galaxy Structure at $z > 3$ with JWST in the SMACS 0723 Field
The Detectability of Rocky Planet Surface and Atmosphere Composition with JWST: The Case of LHS 3844b
A first look at the SMACS0723 JWST ERO: spectroscopic redshifts, stellar masses and star-formation histories