harry wrote:Do you not find it amazing the images and the beauty of the cosmos?
Fascinating, nearly always. Amazing only occasionally. Personally, I don't see what to find amazing in the image under discussion. For the most part what's going on in the image is perfectly understandable; I am amazed by things that appear to operate differently from what physics would suggest.
As for filaments, filaments are filaments small and large and their formation is extraordinary, how they connect from one object to the other like a web similar to the brain, having electrical impulses interconnecting each.
Of course, there's no electrical connection associated with these filaments, nor with larger filaments. In fact, there's no connection of any kind. These are fully understood as shock fronts in gas and dust. Larger scale filaments are gravitational structures.
As for star formation filaments play an important part in sparking and rejuvinating stars.
No, they don't. They merely provide areas with sufficient dust and gas density that stars are able to form. The "sparking" of stars results from gravitational collapse. And stars are never "rejuvenated"; they have one life, and at the end (if they are large enough) they inject some or most of their material back into space to become the raw material for new stars.
[quote="harry"]Do you not find it amazing the images and the beauty of the cosmos?[/quote]
Fascinating, nearly always. Amazing only occasionally. Personally, I don't see what to find amazing in the image under discussion. For the most part what's going on in the image is perfectly understandable; I am amazed by things that appear to operate differently from what physics would suggest.
[quote]As for filaments, filaments are filaments small and large and their formation is extraordinary, how they connect from one object to the other like a web similar to the brain, having electrical impulses interconnecting each.[/quote]
Of course, there's no electrical connection associated with these filaments, nor with larger filaments. In fact, there's no connection of any kind. These are fully understood as shock fronts in gas and dust. Larger scale filaments are gravitational structures.
[quote]As for star formation filaments play an important part in sparking and rejuvinating stars.[/quote]
No, they don't. They merely provide areas with sufficient dust and gas density that stars are able to form. The "sparking" of stars results from gravitational collapse. And stars are never "rejuvenated"; they have one life, and at the end (if they are large enough) they inject some or most of their material back into space to become the raw material for new stars.