This is fascinating and it shows how much more we can see with the JWST that we didn't know about before....
`James Webb telescope solves dusty star mystery'
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`...WR 140. It's a double star system, or a binary, some 5,000 light-years from Earth. Those rings are dust shells that extend outwards over 10 trillion km. That's a distance that's hard to comprehend. Put another way, it's 70,000 times the distance between Earth and our Sun. "Previous observations of WR 140 revealed the presence of up to three shells. To see 17 like this is amazing, and shows the power of James Webb," said Dr Olivia Jones from the UK Astronomy Technology Centre (UK ATC) in Edinburgh which helped to build the telescope. The WR in the name of the system refers to "Wolf-Rayet". It's a type of star. A big one that's reaching the end of its life. Wolf-Rayets are unwieldy. They billow huge gaseous winds into space.'...
Further down the article is this, which is quite a surprise. Usually we expect dust in space to be rock material, silicates and the like. But this dust is made of rings of carbon and hydrogen...
`The shells are dominated by polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, PAHs. These are very carbon-rich compounds. You find them on burnt toast and in the exhaust from motor vehicles. PAHs produced by stars are thought to enrich the carbon content throughout the Universe.'
By the way anyone interested in the universe will find the latest episode of Sky at Night very interesting:
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An audience puts questions to a panel of astronomers. It's great to see some of the kids asking great questions!