Given the chemical composition, temperature, and density of the gas, «the star formation in this galaxy must have happened at a rate five times faster than that in the Milky Way,» he says, which suggests
why the early galaxies could form so quickly.
Not exact matches
A supernova that went off in 1987 produced large quantities of dust, which may explain
why galaxies in the
early universe were so dusty
The decreasing number of
galaxies as time progresses also contributes to the solution for Olbers» paradox (first formulated in the
early 1800s by German astronomer Heinrich Wilhelm Olbers):
Why is the sky dark at night if the universe contains an infinity of stars?
No one knows
why, but the result suggests that
galaxies in the
early universe created stars differently than they do today.
Astronomers aren't sure
why, but they posit that the tiny
galaxy ran out of the gases that fuel star birth
early on.
The discovery solves a riddle in understanding how giant elliptical
galaxies developed quickly in the
early universe and
why they stopped producing stars soon after.
[And while you're reading, Zotmeister has a lengthy description of
why Pac - Man CE rocks on the Twin
Galaxies forum, starting: «It is to the original Pac - Man what the Tetris the Grand Master series is to the
early Tetris games», and going into plenty more detail about the nuances of the switched - up, almost delicate, still high score - centric gameplay.]