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The James Webb Space Telescope detects methyl cation (CH3+) in a young star system with a protoplanetary disk that is located ...
A new study lends support to the notion that JuMBOs (Jupiter-mass binary objects) discovered by the James Webb Space ...
The Orion Nebula seen by the older Spitzer Space Telescope (on the left) and through the eyes of the James Webb Space Telescope (on the right). (Image credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, PDRs4All ERS Team ...
The Orion Nebula may be a familiar astronomical sight over Earth but that hasn't stopped the James Webb Space Telescope from seeing this star-forming region in a stunning new light.
The James Webb Space Telescope captures the bright Orion Nebula. Credit: ESA / Webb / NASA / CSA / M. Zamani (ESA/Webb) / PDRs4All ERS Team Astronomers have detected for the first time in space a ...
The latest spectacle, observed by the James Webb Space Telescope, is an agglomeration of nearly 150 free-floating objects amid the Orion Nebula, not far in mass from Jupiter. Dozens of these ...
The Webb Telescope recently imaged a region of the Orion Nebula associated with star birth, and the result is about what we’ve come to expect from the cutting-edge space observatory.
A James Webb Space Telescope image showing the spectrum of light from objects in the Orion Nebula, known as Jupiter Mass Binary Objects, among some of the fainter lines.
The Orion nebula as captured by the Hubble Space Telescope, left, and the James Webb Space Telescope, right. NASA/ESA/CSA/PDRS4all Sign up for CNN’s Wonder Theory science newsletter.
New images taken by the James Webb Space Telescope pierce through thick layers of stardust and gas, revealing the most-detailed look yet into the heart of the Orion Nebula.. In 2017, an ...
Observations by the James Webb Space Telescope show that a compact disk of gas and dust around a young star in the Orion Nebula is losing massive amounts of hydrogen each year.The disk, known as a ...
The James Webb Space Telescope has captured the most detailed and "breathtaking" images to date inside the Orion Nebula, shedding light on how stars and planetary systems formed 4.5 billion years ago.