Discovering the 'kindergarten'

Telescope in Antarctica has just announced a new discovery, showing a giant gas cloud containing star embryos in the pictorial phase.

Expert group of News South Wales University (Australia) is using the Antarctic Heat telescope to map the location of giant clouds containing molecular gas, ie the largest objects in the Milky Way role. The game is the birthplace of stars.

Picture 1 of Discovering the 'kindergarten'
Self-operated Heat Telescope without interference expert - (Photo: RedOrbit)

'The newly discovered gas cloud is shaped like a long strand of fiber, about 10 light-years across and lasts 200 light-years, weighing 50,000 times our sun' , according to The Australian quoted team leader Michael Burton.

Michael Burton said the evidence showed that it was in the early stages of formation, before any stars appeared.

The discovery of a cloud of galaxies about 15,000 light-years from Earth will help experts determine how these mysterious objects grow in the heart of the Milky Way.

The Heat Telescope is being placed on a height of 3,962m called Fringe A , one of the coldest places on the surface of the globe, and also the driest place, with no water vapor in the air, allowing terahertz radiation from Space reaches the ground and can be detected.

'We own a self-propelled telescope, observing the Milky Way from the heart of Antarctica,' according to Burton expert.

Fringe A is more than 900km away from the place where people live, and absolutely no one comes in during the year.