Huge star "mass star" It is born where a lump of gas collides or November 15th 4:53

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Groups such as Nagoya University have announced that huge stars called “mass stars” that are many times larger than the Sun may be born where the gas masses that make up the stars collide.

Among the stars, stars with a large mass are called “mass stars”, and there are more than 100 times as large as the sun.

Groups such as Nagoya University and Osaka Prefectural University are radio telescopes in the South American Chile, the ALMA telescope. We have succeeded in observing the details of the stars and the surrounding gas that forms the star material.

The gas is streaky at high density, and the “massive star” at the base of the gas is a newly born star less than 100,000 years old.

This streaky gas is thought to have been formed by the “large Magellanic Nebula” colliding with a mass of gas sucked in about 200 million years ago. Is possible.

“We believe we have clarified one of the mechanisms that make a huge star,” says Yasuo Fukui, a professor at Nagoya University Graduate School.