Not exact matches
We suspect that water, the constituent of Saturn's deepest
cloud deck, can suppress convection in the lighter
hydrogen atmosphere for a period of decades, until finally buoyancy wins out and a
large convective outburst ensues.
Complex organic molecules, consisting of carbon bonded with other elements like oxygen and
hydrogen, are common in the Milky Way, but it was uncertain whether they would be produced in certain dwarf galaxies like the neighboring
Large Magellanic
Cloud.
Using the Very
Large Array of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in the US, the team observed radio emission from
hydrogen in a distant galaxy and found that it would have contained billions of young, massive stars surrounded by
clouds of
hydrogen gas.
In the spectrum, the team found evidence of a
large concentration of neutral
hydrogen clouds close to the galaxy, indicating the presence of a giant cluster of embryonic galaxies.
Now images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope have revealed a
large cloud of
hydrogen and oxygen — most likely in the form of water vapour — extending from the moon's south pole.
They found a
large cloud of
hydrogen and oxygen extending from the moon's south pole.
This enormous
cloud of ionized
hydrogen is the
largest known nebula in our galaxy.
Even better, blue or red shifts could be measured for the
large clouds of
hydrogen gas detected across the Milky Way by radio telescopes.
The Milky Way (like other spiral galaxies) is surrounded by a
large halo region which contains globular clusters,
large clouds of
hydrogen gas, and a huge mass of the mysterious dark matter.
This star - forming region of ionised
hydrogen gas is in the
Large Magellanic
Cloud, a small galaxy which neighbours the Milky Way.
Green Bank, WV — A team of astronomers using the National Science Foundation's Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope (GBT) has made the first conclusive detection of what appear to be the leftover building blocks of galaxy formation — neutral
hydrogen clouds — swarming around the Andromeda Galaxy, the nearest
large spiral galaxy to the Milky Way.
New stars form from
large, cold (10 degrees Kelvin)
clouds of dust and gas (mostly
hydrogen) that lie between existing stars in a galaxy.