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Protostellar Jets (Hidden Universe)

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Uploaded by on Sep 12, 2008

Giant jets from baby stars blow colorful bubbles in interstellar space. Spitzer's infrared view reveals these structures in colorful ways never seen before.

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Science & Technology

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  • wrong, kind of. a star has to be MASSIVE

    to make a black hole

    ours isn't even close to long enough

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  • Nice images. Orion's my favourite constellation, & there are just so many cool nebula around it!

  • @spinto12345 i think what they mean by hidden is the fact that you can NOT see this stuff with the naked eye and a telescope

  • i truly dont understand y ppl insist on calling some of these proto stars or things like it "hidden" or "parallel" universes wen its is technically a grammatical fuck up. its called a "UNIVERSE" it is THE single body of everything in all being that is why it has the prefix "uni" (meaning 1) instead of "poly" (multiple, more than 2) theres no sense in calling it something it isnt. that is simple and easy 2 understand wen its so compressed but u still cant comprehend that it is everything ever....

  • Protostellar jets doesn't have an event horizon. Blackholes only have it. These are new born stars.

  • protosteller jets are different from the jets emmitted by black holes. Black holes emit radiowaves.

  • @ShippoAlex - It can also turn into a neutron star or just a white dwarf.

  • tell me something i dont know so boring

    1/5

  • not always

  • not all the smaller ones dont-only supergiants do

  • ShippoAlex:

    Actually that all depends on the mass of the star. If a star is less than 1.4 the mass of our sun, it will become a white dwarf. If a star is between ~1.4*solar mass and ~2*solar mass, its remnants will become a neutron star. Now if a star is nearly 3*solar mass or greater, which is what we know as a supernova, its fate ends up as a black hole.

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