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SPL RF Apr 2018

EN_01314036_0179
SPL RF Apr 2018
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Illustration of the Universe's first generations of stars. Scientists estimate that the first stars began to shine when the Universe was just 180 million years old, a fraction of its 13.8-billion-year age. Astronomers have detected these stars indirectly for the first time, by observing the signals in hydrogen gas that these stars illuminated. These stars are theorized to have been very massive, burning through their hydrogen supplies in around a million years or so, and then turning into the red giants and supergiants seen in this illustration.
SPL RF Apr 2018
2018-04-07
East News
Science Photo Library RF
MARK GARLICK/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
f0212141
3,11MB
62cm x 40cm przy 300dpi
1ST, ANCIENT, ART, ARTWORK, ASTRONOMICAL, ASTRONOMY, ASTROPHYSICAL, ASTROPHYSICS, BIRTH, BLUE, CLOUDS, COSMOLOGICAL, COSMOLOGY, FIRST, GARLICK, GENERATION, GIANT, HOT, ILLUSTRATION, LIBRARY, MARK, NEBULA, NUCLEOSYNTHESIS, RED, SCIENCE, SPACE, STAR, STARS, SUPERGIANT, YOUNG,