The difference with Eris, says astrophysicist Piero Madau of the University of California, Santa Cruz, is realistic star formation: His team included equations that precisely modeled how
exploding stars expel gas from the central regions and spark the birth of new stars in clusters throughout the galaxy.
Not exact matches
These gases — the expanding detritus of
exploded stars, or material
expelled in the stellar winds of living
stars — fill the galaxy, forming the raw material from which new
stars are constantly being made.