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NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has captured a rare cosmic alignment featuring a newborn star’s outflow, known as ...
A newborn star, a blast of glowing gas, and a distant spiral galaxy — all caught in one stunning snapshot by the James Webb ...
New James Webb Space Telescope captures a "cosmic tornado" with imagery of the dramatic outflow from a newly formed star.
Webb’s exquisite details reveal a chance, random alignment of a protostellar outflow and a distant spiral galaxy. When we observe the universe, we're looking at a three-dimensional space projected ...
This protostar is a Class I protostar, which means it is a relatively young star in stellar terms, at about 100,000 years old, and often still embedded in a dense envelope of gas and dust.
This protostar is a Class I protostar, which means it is a relatively young star in stellar terms, at about 100,000 years old, and often still embedded in a dense envelope of gas and dust.
As a Class I protostar, astronomers estimate it to be no more than one million years old, and in its peak era for gaining mass. As for the bright dot first captured in 2006, it doesn’t take an ...
This new composite image combining observations from NASA's James Webb Space Telescope's NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) and MIRI (Mid-Infrared Instrument) provides a high-resolution view to explore the ...
Located roughly 1.5 light-years away from HH 49/50 (off the lower right corner of the Webb image), CED 110 IRS4 is a Class I protostar. Class I protostars are young objects (tens of thousands to a ...