In the 1920s, Edwin Hubble and George Lemaitre discovered that the more distant the galaxy is, the faster it moves away from Earth. That discovery led to the Big Bang theory, suggesting that the universe started to expand around 13.8 billion years ago.
The 'tired light theory' was largely neglected, as astronomers adopted the Big Bang theory as the consensus model of the universe. But the confidence of some astronomers in the Big Bang theory started to weaken when the powerful James Webb Space Telescope saw first light.
The groundbreaking telescope revealed a glaring discrepancy, which should force us to reevaluate our current understanding of the creation of the universe. Instead of showing an infant early universe while peering into the very earliest days of the universe, JWST observations have shown large and mature galaxies.
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