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It's named Eos, after the Greek goddess of the dawn, and contains approximately 3,400 solar masses worth of gas.
The birthplace of stars begins within large, cold clouds of gas and dust, which eventually collapse under the weight of ...
Scientists have uncovered a colossal, previously hidden hydrogen cloud, named Eos, just 300 light-years from Earth — the ...
The cloud, named Eos, is chock-full of molecular hydrogen and possibly rife with star-forming potential in the future.
Despite being 3,400 times the mass of the sun and just 300 light-years away, the hydrogen cloud had gone unnoticed until now.
Scientists have unveiled an enormous gas cloud just 300 light-years from the solar system that measures about full 40 moons ...
The find shines light on how galaxies begin to turn gas and dust "into stars and planets," said astrophysicist Blakesley ...
A team led by Rutgers University-New Brunswick discovered the large structure. It lies just 300 light years from Earth. Named ...
A groundbreaking discovery has been made by astronomers, who have uncovered a massive molecular cloud located just 300 ...
A giant object that has been lurking in the relative galactic vicinity of the Solar System this entire time has just been unmasked in all its enormous, invisible glory.
An international team led by a Rutgers University astrophysicist has discovered a vast, potentially star-forming cloud of ...
Named Eos, the cloud of gas would appear huge in the night sky if visible to the naked eye and could shed light on solar ...