 What we're seeing is actually one of these young stellar discs seen edge-on. Now if you look at it more face-on, it looks round. But if you look at it from the edge, it looks like a dark line. And what we see is that dark band cutting across the light, reflecting off the top and the bottom, just coming from the star. And the Whiff Pick 2 image, the optical image that was taken by John Criss, shows a jet, which is streamers of gas shooting out of the middle of the system. Now we have some leftover information that shows us how our solar system form. We have little bits of meteorites and comets that we can study, but that's an incomplete record. What we can really do with Hubble is go and look at stars that are just forming today and get a glimpse back four and a half billion years ago at what was going on in our own solar system.