An image of space with thousands of galaxies with an insert that is blown up of the farthest galaxy ever detected.

Distant Galaxy GN-z11

Hubble Space Telescope astronomers, studying the northern hemisphere field from the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey (GOODS), have measured the distance to the farthest galaxy ever seen. The survey field contains tens of thousands of galaxies stretching far back into time. Galaxy GN-z11, shown in the inset, is seen as it was 13.4 billion years in the past, just 400 million years after the big bang, when the universe was only three percent of its current age. The galaxy is ablaze with bright, young, blue stars, but looks red in this image because its light has been stretched to longer spectral wavelengths by the expansion of the universe.

Credits: NASA , ESA , P. Oesch (Yale University), G. Brammer (STScI ), P. van Dokkum (Yale University), and G. Illingworth (University of California, Santa Cruz)