He universe seems to be speaking to us through the stars and galaxies that inhabit its vast terrain. Perhaps it is not a direct message to our civilization, but their behavior tells us what the cosmic past was like and perhaps what the future that existence itself holds for us will be like.
the tools of James Webb Space Telescope of NASA (United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration), ESA (European Space Agency) and CSA (Canadian Space Agency)they detected two stars that interact with each other.
Through this relationship and the rest of the chemical elements that occur around it, they form an impressive question mark, used in most of the grammars of the world’s languages.
The official site of the THAT shows the image (we integrate them below) in high resolution. The stars, called Herbig Haro 46/47 are closely linked in an active way. Both are buried deep, appearing as an orange-white blob. They are surrounded by a disk of gas and dust that continues to increase in mass.
Experts in the field say this is an important object to study because it is relatively young, only a few thousand years old.
“Stars take millions of years to form. Targets like this also give researchers insight into how stars accumulate mass over time, allowing them to model how our own Sun, a low-mass star, formed,” the ESA said in its review.
Intending for anyone to understand the image, they explain that the two-sided orange lobes were created by earlier ejections from these stars. The most recent stellar ejections appear as blue thread-like features, stretching along the angled diffraction peak that covers the orange lobes.
“Actively forming stars ingest the surrounding gas and dust immediately into a disk (imagine a circle edged around them),” says the ESA. When stars ‘eat’ too much material in too little time, they respond by sending out two-sided jets along the opposite axis, stabilizing the star’s spin and removing mass from the area. Over millennia, these outflows regulate how much mass stars retain.