NEW YORK: Scientists are amazed by the growth of a young star into adulthood as it revealed the development over the course of around 18 years.
The astronomers from the National Radio Astronomy Observatory studied two images of the massive “W75N(B)-VLA 2” star: one during its beginning and one after its development ended.
To study the star, the researchers used the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array from the National Science Foundation. Astronomers took the picture in 2014 and compared it with an earlier image of the star, 4, 2000 light-years away, from 1996.
Carlos Carrasco-Gonzalez from the National Autonomous University of Mexico’s Center of Radioastronomy and Astrophysics said that the comparison between the two pictures was amazing, according to Astronomy.
The star’s image from 1996 showed hot ionized wind gushing out of the young star, while the 2014 image showed the said wind deforming into something elongated.






