WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.001 --> 00:00:13.535 Our galaxy contains at least 200 billion stars. Yet the details of how they formed remain mysterious. 2 00:00:13.535 --> 00:00:22.508 Scientists know that stars form from the collapse of huge hydrogen clouds... 3 00:00:22.508 --> 00:00:31.481 ...that are squeezed under gravity until nuclear fusion ignites. 4 00:00:31.511 --> 00:00:40.632 But only about 30 percent of the cloud’s gas ends up in the newborn star. 5 00:00:40.646 --> 00:00:49.544 So, where does the rest of the hydrogen go? 6 00:00:49.544 --> 00:01:05.452 Astronomers had assumed that a forming star blows off gas through stellar winds and jets. 7 00:01:05.452 --> 00:01:13.980 These winds and jets should stop further growth of the star. 8 00:01:13.980 --> 00:01:31.557 They should also create cavities in the surrounding gas that widen until the cloud dissipates. 9 00:01:31.558 --> 00:01:41.421 But a new study shows something different. 10 00:01:41.460 --> 00:01:56.293 Using observations from NASA’s Hubble and Spitzer space telescopes and ESA’s Herschel Space Observatory... 11 00:01:56.293 --> 00:02:10.000 ...researchers studied 304 developing stars in a region called the Orion Complex. 12 00:02:10.000 --> 00:02:22.756 They found that the cavities around the stars did not grow over time, as expected. 13 00:02:22.756 --> 00:02:34.621 In fact, the cavities don’t seem to expand until the stars push out all of the gas in the cloud. 14 00:02:34.621 --> 00:02:48.193 If stars don't end up isolated in cavities, why doesn't the gas find its way into the star? 15 00:02:48.193 --> 00:02:57.685 For now, the answer remains a mystery. 16 00:02:57.685 --> 00:03:02.015 [ SILENCE ]