Hubble sees most distant star ever, 28 billion light-years away

https://www.cnn.com/2022/03/30/world/hubble-distant-star-image-scn/index.html

"Why do you say it's lies Noodles?  Probably because you don't understand science!"

No...It's because each light year is 6 trillion miles.

light year
[ˈlīt ˈˌyi(ə)r]
 
NOUN
 
  1. astronomy
    a unit of astronomical distance equivalent to the distance that light travels in one year, which is 9.4607 × 1012 km (nearly 6 trillion miles).
     
     
    So this is saying they definately saw something that was:
     
    6,000,000,000,000 X 28,000,000,000
     
    miles away.
     
    or  1.68e+23.
     
    FUCKING IMPOSSIBLE.
     
    If that's so then no need to send too many rovers, because we should be able to see everything in our galaxy...We should have clear pics of every plant's surface without an issue...If we can see or sense things that far away then every thing else be no issue right?
     
    Then why do all the pics NASA sends out look like some sort of computer animation program, but we can't get anything well detailed THAT IS VERY CLOSE BY in at least our solar system?