The Question: "two actively forming young stars located 1,470 light-years from Earth in the Vela Constellation. In the image, the stars, named Herbig-Haro 46/47, are surrounded by a disk of material that "feeds" the stars as they grow for millions of years."
I'm certain "Herbig-Haro" means something to someone. You could possibly read Haro as Harrow, or Hero if you don't see that well. The numbers 46 and 47 might refer to Biden and what comes next.
There's also this bit about... "spotting galaxies as distant as 13.4 million light-years away that existed just 420 million years after the Big Bang".
Cherry picking the 34 gives us the Q post about "My Fellow Americans", and the number 42 is "the answer to everything".
There's quite a bit on merging galaxies, which could be two sides finally coming together over some common issue. Soon, I hope.
Oddly the article mentions the "eight-pronged refraction spikes" on the stars, but the pic shows 12 prongs (6 blue, 6 white), which I believe is probably correct for hexagonal optics. I have no idea why they would make this obvious mistake, but they've put out similarly mismatched images before, leading to calls of fakery.
Sauce
https://www.space.com/james-webb-space-telescope-question-mark-galaxy-photo
There's some interesting tidbits in the sauce.
The Question: "two actively forming young stars located 1,470 light-years from Earth in the Vela Constellation. In the image, the stars, named Herbig-Haro 46/47, are surrounded by a disk of material that "feeds" the stars as they grow for millions of years."
I'm certain "Herbig-Haro" means something to someone. You could possibly read Haro as Harrow, or Hero if you don't see that well. The numbers 46 and 47 might refer to Biden and what comes next.
There's also this bit about... "spotting galaxies as distant as 13.4 million light-years away that existed just 420 million years after the Big Bang".
Cherry picking the 34 gives us the Q post about "My Fellow Americans", and the number 42 is "the answer to everything".
There's quite a bit on merging galaxies, which could be two sides finally coming together over some common issue. Soon, I hope.
Oddly the article mentions the "eight-pronged refraction spikes" on the stars, but the pic shows 12 prongs (6 blue, 6 white), which I believe is probably correct for hexagonal optics. I have no idea why they would make this obvious mistake, but they've put out similarly mismatched images before, leading to calls of fakery.