“The data indicates that the youngest stars form in filaments of gas,” Loeb said. “Subsequently the gas cools and fragments ...
H3+, known as "the molecule that made the universe," plays a crucial role in interstellar chemistry and the birth of stars.
Stars emerge from vast regions of gas and dust known as molecular clouds. These stellar nurseries, often spanning hundreds of ...
Stars are born in dense molecular clouds, but did they always form this way? Recent research suggests that in the early ...
"Even today, our understanding of star formation is still developing; comprehending how stars formed in the earlier universe is even more challenging." ...
Images from ALMA telescope provide insight to the earlier years of our universe.
There are plenty of types of stars out there, but one stands out for being just a little weirder than the others. You might even say it's strange. According to a paper from researchers at Guangxi ...
"Dramatic activity serves as a beacon, allowing us to identify hidden black holes in these small galaxies." ...
Scientists didn't expect that stars would be able to still form in the dwarf galaxy known as Leo P, which the James Webb Telescope recently imaged.