"The venerable Hubble Space Telescope has widened humanity?s
perspective on the cosmos yet again, this time revealing the most
distant ? and therefore oldest ? individual star ever seen. This
star formed in the juvenile universe just 900 million years after the
Big Bang. Astronomers have nicknamed it Earendel, a tribute to
English fantasy author J.R.R. Tolkien, as well as the European
mythology he drew upon for his stories of Middle Earth.[sic] ..."
Full article here: <https://earthsky.org/space/most-distant-star-yet-seen-spied-by-
hubble/>
The discovery team must be familiar with some of the History of
Middle-Earth series; otherwise they'd have named it Earendil, with an
"i".
"The venerable Hubble Space Telescope has widened humanity?s
perspective on the cosmos yet again, this time revealing the most
distant ? and therefore oldest ? individual star ever seen. This
star formed in the juvenile universe just 900 million years after the
Big Bang. Astronomers have nicknamed it Earendel, a tribute to
English fantasy author J.R.R. Tolkien, as well as the European
mythology he drew upon for his stories of Middle Earth.[sic] ..."
Full article here: <https://earthsky.org/space/most-distant-star-yet-seen-spied-by-
hubble/>
The discovery team must be familiar with some of the History of
Middle-Earth series; otherwise they'd have named it Earendil, with an
"i".
On Thu, 31 Mar 2022 10:10:41 -0700, Stan Brown wrote:...
The discovery team must be familiar with some of the History of Middle-Earth series; otherwise they'd have named it Earendil, with an
"i".
OTOH, they may use that spelling because of the poem "Christ":
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christ_I
which was Tolkien's own source for the name.
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