In a remote part of the galaxy, a giant young star is firing off two streams of hot gas in opposite directions at hundreds of thousands of miles per hour.

The star, known as S284p1, is about 10 times the mass of the sun and still growing. Its jets span roughly 8 light-years across — about double the distance between the sun and the next-closest star system . Astronomers spotted S284p1 with the James Webb Space Telescope , a joint partnership of NASA and its European and Canadian counterparts.

Though hundreds of baby stars' beams — aka " protostellar jets " — have been seen before, they're mainly powered by small stars. Observing such large jets coming from an enormous star is rare and suggests the scale of the jet correlates with the size of the developing star, s

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