First of all, did anyone imagine they don’t?Astronomers have discovered the first example of a swirling disk of material feeding a young star located in a galaxy outside the Milky Way. The disk is near-identical to those found around infant stars in the Milky Way and suggests that stars and planets form in other galaxies just as they do in our own.
But what causes the jets? Notice how in this article and others they always seem to gloss over that? That’s because they don’t know why. If they come up with an explanation, it's vague and sounds like one pulled out of thin air. Plasma cosmologists have offered a reason but they’ve so far just ignored it.McLeod and colleagues were tipped off to the existence of this system when the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) instrument on ESO's Very Large Telescope (VLT) spotted a jet emerging from a forming star. … snip … "We discovered a jet being launched from this young massive star, and its presence is a signpost for ongoing disc accretion," McLeod added.
Notice one more thing in the article. It talks about gas gas gas and dust dust dust and wind wind wind. There's not one mention of plasma. So the role that electromagnetism and electric currents play is completely ignored. These people aren’t learning a thing, are they?
I noticed one more thing in another article on a JWST Herbig Haro observation: https://www.nasa.gov/missions/webb/nasa ... oung-star/ . It talks about the inner jet "wiggling". Because they don't factor in electromagnetic effects on plasma, they have no clue of what's going on. That's another article, by the way, that doesn't even mention the word plasma. It's gas and dust ... and "wind".