Thanks for the comments.

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Along with the explanation, your image gives me the same kind of feeling that I get when two mirrors are angled and I look down a "hallway" of infinite reflections. Scary and full of wonder at the same time. Thank you for the explanation along with the image.
I should be able to explain stuff around this, I've held enough lectures about it.

It's of course impossible to truly convey the tremendeous scales here, I can only hope to give a hint.
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I had no idea that newborn stars also projects particles at the polar axis like that of the creation of black holes Griatch. Cool stuff. the new solar system looks beautiful too.
Yes, it was long predicted, but but the jets have these days actually been observed. They are mainly prevalent while the disk is young and the rate of material falling onto the star large. Physically, the jets might be the only way for the star to get rid of the angular momentum given it by the infalling material.
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fascinating...I love the explanation as well as the art. I never had thought about it before, how clumpy the gaseous clouds would be, your picture really portrays that well.
Yes, for a long time we thought the protoplanetary nebula/disk was a quiet and well-ordered place where planets formed rather peacefully. This has turned out not to be the case. We were literally born out of chaos and even after the gas disk itself went away the giant planets played billiards with each other a few times (shovering us with waves upon wave of asteroids in the process) before settling into their current configuration (this is coincidentally called
The Nice model of planet formation ("Nice" pronounced "Niss", as in the city, not as in being friendly).
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Griatch