At the center is a thin horizontal orange cloud known as Herbig-Haro 46/47 that is uneven with rounded ends, and tilted from bottom left to top right. At its center is a set of very large red diffraction spikes in Webb’s eight-pointed pattern. At the middle of the diffraction spikes is a yellow-white blob, which hides two tightly orbiting stars. The orange lobe to the left is fatter, ending in a rounder edge. Overall, this lobe is more continuous, though there’s an absence of matter toward the bottom center. Just off the edge of this lobe is a tiny red arc that curves in the opposite direction and is fully separated from the lobe. The right lobe is thinner overall, and ends in a smaller orange semi-circle that has a faint purple outline. Just off the edge of this lobe, also fully separated, is a slightly smaller orange blob. A thin, undulating blue line runs from the central stars through the right lobe, and a fainter one is partially covered by the red diffraction spike. A delicate, semi-transparent blue cloud known as a nebula covers the majority of the orange lobes. It extends toward the top and fades to the left, not extending beyond the left lobe. Along the right and bottom edge, the nebula appears in a soft orange outline, shaped like a backward L. The background is filled with tiny stars with miniature diffractions spikes, circular and spiral galaxies in whites and pinks, and tiny red dots that are the most distant galaxies.
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