NASA’s James Webb telescope has captured images of the Herbig Harrow phenomenon, which is a high-speed bipolar jet stream in space.
According to Tekna’s technology and technology news service, James Webb’s images are related to a space body approximately 1000 light years away from Earth, which is located in the constellation Savoosh. Herbig halos are luminous regions around very young stars that can be seen as shock waves due to stellar winds or stellar gas outflows.
In NASA’s James Webb’s new image of this young star, an outflow from a class zero protostar can be seen. This star is similar to the sun and its age is only 10,000 years. Its mass is about 8% of the mass of the sun today, which will eventually become the same as the sun.
James Webb used the infrared instrument to image this young star as a powerful method for observing newborn stars. At birth, these stars are hidden in the surrounding molecular cloud gases and must be observed through infrared imaging. Also, in these images, the shock waves are located as a set towards the bottom, left, top and right. It is also possible to observe a thin bipolar jet by these shocks.
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