Protostar
Stars form when bodies of dust and gas create enough mass to create a gravitational effect that's able to then pull in more gas, the process continues and the mass increases until the pressure at the centre is sufficient for fusion to begin.
There's many examples of protostars, in fact back in 2012, NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope focused in on L1527 IRS, believed at the time to be the youngest forming star ever found.
Recently, the JWST re-visited this protostar, and the title image was the result.
The forming star cannot be visually spotted, but is thought to be around 20-40% the mass of our own Sun already.
If you look closely, you can see there's a dark patch in the centre, this is actually the accretion disk around the newly formed star, what is left over after the formation, may go on to form the planets, in fact, they may be actually starting to be created already, as recent evidence does point to planets being born around the same time as the star does in many cases.
The protostar is only 450 light years from Earth in the Constellation of Taurus, and is thought to be around 100,000 years old, a blink of an eye in the life of a star, particularly of this mass.
Whirlpool Galaxy M51a was the very first galaxy classified as a spiral galaxy.
Star Trails in Western Australia by Trevor Dobson
Laika: 1954-1957
Opportunity Rover: 2004-2019
Gamma Cas & Ghost Nebula © Antoine Grelin
★•Astronomy, Physics, and Aerospace•★ Original and Reblogged Content curated by a NASA Solar System Ambassador
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