NEW JWST IMAGE shows SEVENTEEN carbon dust shells around a binary star system
@science@lemmy.world @science@beehaw.org @space@lemmy.world @space@newsmast.community #space #science #nasa #astronomy
Someone get JJ Abrams off the camera please.
Count the rings to see how old the star is.
Later discovered that the JWST just has astigmatism.
I remember seeing this explained when Webb first launched and found it really interesting
That is pretty cool! I wonder what each ring represents in terms of time. I imagine it’s fairly rapid (like dozens of years?)
What’s a carbon dust shell and why’s that cool?
@cyberpunk007@lemmy.ca A carbon dust shell is a layer of carbon-rich material expelled from a star in it’s later stages of life in which a star ejects these shells due to stellar instability since they are the lighter, outer elements of a star.
It’s cool because JWST could even resolve detail like that!! We can also learn more about the carbon chemistry of the system, binary dynamics, and the history of the system :D
It can resolve that, but can’t see the secret Nazi bases on the moon? Must be fake.
(I’m joking - this is awesome)
Thank you :)
Carbon is pretty important for earth, and it’s unclear how we have so much of it. Dual star systems shooting out carbon at 1% the speed of light kind of explains it pretty well: https://science.nasa.gov/missions/webb/webb-watches-carbon-rich-dust-shells-form-expand-in-star-system/
The JWST website has some more information!
Carbon, like water, is a very cool
elementsubstance which doesn’t fit nicely into the known laws of physics. Like water it is also one of the most importantelementssubstances for the development of life as we know it.element which doesn’t fit nicely into the known laws of physics
You might be offended but you really do need this; you’re an uneducated idiot spouting nonsense and you should stop.
Down boy. You are correct that I made an error there, talking off the cuff late at night about some of the coolest things I learned while actually getting an education in STEM. Water behaves in some really strange ways, such as being so slippery in solid form by maintaining a thin layer of liquid on the surface, or having vastly greater surface tension than other liquids.
Go use your super powers to help people who are actually in danger, instead of slinging insults at random strangers who use one word wrong while discussing their interests.
It’s not one word it is the entire thrust of this claim
doesn’t fit nicely into the known laws of physics
Carbon and H2O have been studied extensively, they are well understood and your claim is counter to that.
If you had issues understanding it or believe it isn’t intuitive then that’s fine but a blanket statement that physics models are ‘broken’ when it comes to water is ridiculous.
My dude. You came into a thread where people were happily discussing interesting things and started shitting all over the walls.
Get help.
Your incorrect non-answer to the question helps no one.
Your shitposting is the issue here.
Get educated.
This is a forum for discussion open to the general public, not a scientific symposium. Get some perspective.
You might be offended but you really do need this; you’re acting like an asshole when a simple correction would’ve sufficed.
Please be my guest and spend your life correcting misinformation spouting morons on the internet instead.
The morons don’t listen or learn and only pollute online spaces.
So no a simple correction would not suffice and you would know that if you were paying attention.
You’re still acting like an asshole.
And you’re responding like a moron. You have failed to engage at all on the topic of misinformation and instead choose to defend spreading brain rot.
You’re still acting like an asshole. Blocked.
Water isn’t an element. It is a compound. Hydrogen and Oxygen are elements in said compound.
Avatar lied to me!!
Looks like someone got their hands on a Genesis device…
As they swing past one another (within the central white dot in the Webb images), the stellar winds from each star slam together, the material compresses, and carbon-rich dust forms. Webb’s latest observations show 17 dust shells shining in mid-infrared light that are expanding at regular intervals into the surrounding space.
[…]
Like clockwork, the stars’ winds generate dust for several months every eight years, as the pair make their closest approach during a wide, elongated orbit.
Baaically you’re looking at dust showing a pattern of stellar turbulence. There’s a nice video clip in the article that shows how the two stars orbit each other. Because the orbit is consistent, it is producing these compression waves every 8 years when the stars are closest to each other.
Also interesting:
The dust’s distribution isn’t uniform. Though this isn’t obvious at first glance, zooming in on the shells in Webb’s images reveals that some of the dust has “piled up,” forming amorphous, delicate clouds that are as large as our entire solar system.
I have so many questions. Like, was there supposed to be a link to an article? This picture alone doesn’t really answer any questions.
It’s a Mastodon toot, they only have like 180 characters or something
Yeah, it’d be a shame if they had to sacrifice some of those mentions and hashtags to relay meaningful information.
If you wanna be twitter you behave like twitter.
Oh, that makes sense.
Many instances allow much longer messages, but it depends on the admin and how they see it. Could even be thousands of characters in some cases.
Anyway, mastodon integration is nice, but there are some serious issues too.
Looks cool, what does it mean? 17 carbon dust shells ALL THE WAYYYY.
Sounds like some epic rhythmic banger
Cool cool cool. I imagine this potentially means we’re seeing the development of a 17 object solar system? Maybe with some of those being asteroid belts?
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