The spectacular birthplace of weird carbon molecules known as "buckyballs" came to light in new imagery of a nebula from the James Webb Space Telescope. The gas cloud includes an upside-down question mark shape, which marks a structure scientists don't yet understand.

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) peered 10,000 light-years into space to trace the origin of buckyballs, which are large and hollow molecules resembling a soccer ball. The gas cloud the observatory imaged, known as Tc1, came from a dying star, in the constellation Ara (Latin for "alter") in the southern hemisphere.

by coinfanking

4 Comments

  1. DecelerationTrauma on

    I get the feeling we’re looking at the ruin of an early Kardashev Type 2 civilizaton. It’s a Dark Forest out there folks.

  2. > The gas cloud the observatory imaged, known as Tc1, came from a dying star, in the constellation Ara (Latin for “alter”)

    Editor? Editor?

    Also, FYI:

    > IC 1266 (also known as Tc 1) is a planetary nebula located in the southern constellation of Ara. It is a compact emission nebula surrounding a dying star, appearing stellar due to its small angular size and faint gaseous spectrum. Discovered in 1894 by astronomer Williamina Fleming, IC 1266 lies approximately 12,400 light-years from Earth and is best observed from the Southern Hemisphere.