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A near-infrared light image made by the James Webb Space Telescope of actively forming stars, known as Herbig-Haro 46/47, had at the bottom of the frame an apparent question mark.
NASA just found a question mark in space. What exactly is it? The object is far outside our galactic neighborhood, possibly billions of light-years away. But astronomers have seen similar objects ...
The man in the question mark suit, Matthew Lesko, is usually full of answers — but he was recently speechless when his neighbors in D.C. threw him a surprise 80th birthday party.
So, the curved shape that made the question mark could be a tidal tail. The image taken by the telescope, released last month, shows Herbig-Haro 46/47, which is a star forming cloud, Caplan explained.
So what in the cosmos formed the apparent punctuation mark in space? A recent image taken by the James Webb Space Telescope shows what appears to be a “question mark” in deep space. (Credit ...
James Webb Space Telescope captures image of what seems to be question mark in space, photo shows. It might be colliding galaxies or stars.
So yes, there is a question mark at the end, but we give you permission not to sing it that way. This post was originally published on the National Museum of American History's blog on June 14, 2013.
The “Question Mark Pair” is an optical illusion created by two galaxies that astronomers have observed in deep space with the James Webb Space Telescope.
According to members of the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, the question mark-looking object could be a galaxy that’s being distorted by other nearby galaxies.
NASA's James Webb Space Telescope spotted a question-mark-shaped object in deep space. The object appears in an image of two young stars devouring gas and dust.
The CW chairman and CEO Mark Pedowitz reassured DC fans that the network plans to continue making superhero shows despite recent events.