HomeSpace NewsBizarre rings spied by James Webb Space Telescope are organic dust propelled...

Bizarre rings spied by James Webb Space Telescope are organic dust propelled by starlight

A stunning image from the James Webb Space Telescope revealing concentric angular rings around a giant, distant star stirred a frenzy online in September. “It must be aliens,” some geeks speculated. (It wasn’t, of course.) Now, a pair of new studies has revealed that these cosmic ripples are puffs of organic dust that was generated and then spread across the universe by an odd star system. The research is the first to have found evidence of starlight moving visible matter beyond our solar system.

The star responsible for the mind-boggling spectacle is called WR140, and is, in fact, a system of two stars that orbit each other. The WR marks one star in the pair as a Wolf-Rayet, a rare type of star that is hundreds of thousands of times brighter and much hotter than Earth’s sun. Wolf-Rayet stars represent the final stage in the evolution of giant stars, dozens of times more massive than the sun, before they explode in supernovas and turn into black holes, Yinuo Han, an astronomer at Cambridge University in the U.K. and lead author on one of the new studies about WR140, told Space.com. 

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