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James Webb Space Telescope peers deep into the heart of star formation in our Milky Way galaxy
The star-forming region called Sagittarius B2 contains half of the galactic center's stars, yet only 10% of the gas.
Sagittarius B2, a massive molecular cloud near the center of the Milky Way, is densely packed with stars and complex magnetic ...
The James Webb Space Telescope has uncovered dazzling newborn stars and thick cosmic dust in Sagittarius B2, the Milky Way's ...
Why Sagittarius B2 produces so many stars in comparison to the rest of the galactic center has remained an enduring mystery ...
The first stars in the universe formed out of pristine hydrogen and helium clouds, in the first few hundred million years ...
“Without this dynamic process, stars would not form, and planets and even humankind would not exist,” explained Ji, one of the lead researchers on the project and a principal investigator at PPPL. “It ...
A growing list of dark star candidates could help explain why some early galaxies were so big, so early in the universe.
JWST’s mid-infrared images of Sagittarius B2 uncover dense clouds of cosmic dust hiding active star formation.
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