A section of the Epoch 1 mosaic, with a pair of interacting spiral galaxies visible in the bottom left corner, also with a white spot indicating possibly the first supernova captured by JWST.

A section of the Epoch 1 mosaic, with a pair of interacting spiral galaxies visible in the bottom left corner, also with a white spot indicating possibly the first supernova captured by JWST. (Image credit: NASA/STScI/CEERS/TACC/S. Finkelstein/M. Bagley/Z. Levay. Screenshot by Space.com)

This is the best deep space has to offer.

A team of scientists working with data from the space telescope have released a huge mosaic of images. The image from the Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science Survey (CEERS) is a mosaic of individual frames.

A series of curiosities are captured in the Epoch 1 image, which shows distant galaxies whose light has shifted from visible to IR during their journey through time and space.

NASA's James Webb Space Telescope is live.

The images have led to new discoveries and an unexpected, but not unwelcome, abundance of never-before-seen galaxies.

One of the objects may be one of the earliest galaxies ever seen, as it was less than 400 million years after the Bigbang.

There are several wonders noted by the CEERS team, including an arcs of smaller galaxies close to a bright galaxy, interacting spiral galaxies, a supernova, and a group of red galaxies.

The image can be explored in both medium and high resolution. The collaboration recommends that you do this on a computer or laptop as the file is very large.

There's a lot more to come from the company. The collaboration is still less than halfway through its full survey, which is designed to test making extragalactic surveys, according to Rebecca.

New discoveries and an abundance of never-before-seen galaxies have been the result of our data.

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