The baby star at the center is surrounded by a bright disk called a protostellar disk. Spikes of magnetic flux, gas, and dust in blue. Researchers found that the protostellar disk will expel magnetic ...
In a rare observation, scientists found a baby star "sneezing" gas, dust and magnetic energy out of its disk. This behavior could help solve a longstanding mystery about how stars form without tearing ...
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Researchers have found that baby stars discharge plumes of gas, dust, and magnetic flux from their protostellar disk. The protostellar disk that surrounds developing stars are constantly penetrated by ...
"By investigating the conditions that lead to these 'sneezes' we hope to expand our understanding of how stars and planets are formed." When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an ...
The disk that surrounds newly forming stars shoots out material that could impact its future development. By Laura Baisas Published Apr 11, 2024 8:45 AM EDT Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 ...
The baby star at the center surrounded by a bright disk called a protostellar disk. Spikes of magnetic flux, gas, and dust in blue. Researchers found that the protostellar disk will expel magnetic ...