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Extreme Outer Galaxy star clustersLive Science
•79% Informative
The James Webb Space Telescope has pushed it to the edge closer to home in our very own galaxy, the Milky Way.
A team of astronomers has pointed the JWST at the "Extreme Outer Galaxy " This area is about 58,000 light-years from the heart of the galaxy's " Galactic Center " The result of this galactic envelope-pushing exercise is a stunning image of star clusters in the midst of a "starburst".
We still don't know why their lifetimes are shorter than in star-forming regions.
And, of course, I'd like to understand the kinematics of the jets we detected in Cloud 2S.
The team's research is published in the Astronomical Journal .
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