IC 3639 turns out to be glowing extremely bright due to emission from
hot Iron atoms whose origin is not fully understood.»
Not exact matches
Atoms in the corona are so hot that they give up many of their electrons — iron atoms have been known to lose up to half of their original c
Atoms in the corona are so
hot that they give up many of their electrons —
iron atoms have been known to lose up to half of their original c
atoms have been known to lose up to half of their original count.
If a white dwarf is massive enough to fuse the
iron in its core, those
iron atoms are incredibly
hot and densely packed, squashed together like sweaty clowns stuck in a circus car.
So it's no surprise that Canadian filmmaker
Atom Egoyan, who hasn't made a feature since 2009's softcore drama «Chloe,» is striking while the
iron is
hot.