NASA's James Webb Space Telescope has captured the colourful ejections of two protostars at the centre of Lynds 483.
Young stars enveloped in a transformative cocoon of gas shine brightly in a new image from the Hubble Space Telescope.
This butterfly shaped nebula is the perfect target for the James Webb Space Telescope to learn more about star formation.
If the molecular cloud retains its filamentary shape, it is more likely to break up along its long "string" and form many stars like our sun, a low-mass star with planetary systems. On the other ...
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NASA Scientists Explain A Unique Cloud Found In New Zealand: What It Is, Why It Never Leaves, And The Dangers It Could PoseNow known as the “Taieri Pet”, this unusually shaped cloud is an almost permanent fixture on the landscape, whilst being UFO-like in its appearance. So what is the Taieri Pet? Well it is a ...
When these newer ejections impact older material, they form complex crumpled and twisted structures that expose different ...
In the case of LBN 483, there’s not one but two protostars, the main star having a lower mass ... snugly ensconced within a dense, doughnut-shaped cloud of gas and dust. This cloud is ...
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