How blue-tiful! NASA shares image of ‘5 million year old young star group’

About 200 light-years away, near the edge of the Magellanic Cloud, a group of five-million-year-old young stars shine with bright, blue, newly formed stars.

“Within the star cluster, newly formed bright, blue stars blow caves in this nebula, sculpting the inner margins of the outer fragments, slowly eroding it and eating into the stuff further away, “NASA wrote sharing a photo of the.

“Star formation started at the center of the cluster and spreading out, with the youngest stars still coming up today on the dust ridges,” he said.

The post has raised over a million appearances with netizens appreciating the ‘beautiful cosmos’.

‘Galaxy is so wonderful’ said a user on the photo.

NASA also explained that the hottest stars are blue or blue-white and the coldest ones are red or reddish-brown.

“The color of a star is directly related to the temperature of its surface. The hotter the star, the shorter the light wave it emits,” he said.

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