Quick facts

What it is: A spiral arm of the Whirlpool Galaxy (M51)

Where it is: 31 million light-years away in the constellation Canes Venatici

When it was shared: May 6, 2026

Stars form when vast clouds of dust and hydrogen gas collapse, creating a dense core that heats up until it transforms into a nuclear fusion reactor. What happens in the moments after a star emerges from its birth cloud, however, is a mystery.

This image of one of the spiral arms in the Whirlpool Galaxy (Messier 51) gets astronomers closer to solving that mystery — and in doing so, could answer a key question about the early universe.

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