As the young stars rotate, their magnetic fields interact with the surrounding gas, creating the two streams of ionized gas emitted in opposite directions, which can be seen in the new photos taken by the Gemini South telescope, located on a mountain in the Chilean Andes and operated by NOIRLab. Gemini South is a 8.
"MHO 2147 snakes across a starry backdrop in the image — an appropriately serpentine appearance for an object close to Ophiuchus," officials said in the NOIRLab statement.
Radio wave beacons,bright gamma-day sources,ultramagnetic flares, x-rays, high energy particles like neutrinos streaming from its poles, spinning at 1/4ltspeed,43,000rpm,-over a billion in our galaxy alone...wow! Collapsing Blue supergiants do this..!!!!
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It's so cool
That looks great!!!
Are they actually seen moving or is this an assumption. You realize a move of the thickness of a piece of paper on a telescope film is trillions of miles requiring a speed much greater than the speed of light. Beware disputing Einstein with impossible velocities.