3222: Star Formation

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Star Formation
It's ok, I still have some nice, cool gas clouds that aren't collapsing. As long as nothing ionizes them, I can continue to enjoy their ... HEY! NO!!!
Title text: It's ok, I still have some nice, cool gas clouds that aren't collapsing. As long as nothing ionizes them, I can continue to enjoy their ... HEY! NO!!!

Explanation

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This comic depicts a simplified model of how structure forms in the universe, then pushes it to an absurd extreme. In cosmology, small density variations in the early universe grow over time: regions with slightly higher density attract more matter via gravity, eventually forming gas clouds, stars, and galaxies. Pressure, driven by temperature, resists collapse, so the evolution of a cloud depends on the balance between gravitational attraction and internal pressure; this is often described by the Jeans instability criterion.

In the first panel, the on-screen narrator (with a passing resemblance to the time-travelling sphere), and apparent creator of the universe, describes pressure waves moving through gas and causing it to clump. In the second, the clouds begin to collapse under gravity as more gas falls in. The third panel sees the outcome: as collapse proceeds, the gas heats up (via compression and radiation processes), increasing pressure and eventually sparking fusion The comic depicts the formation of stars, something that we know the universe has done, with the implication that this was a totally unforeseen outcome for the manipulator or creator of this universe.

The final panel humorously frames this as the narrator lamenting the destruction of their “beautiful clouds,” as the process has gone out of their control and produced a star instead of the desired (and perhaps, to their mind, more aesthetically pleasing) gently pulsating clouds.

The title text continues this joke by referencing the importance of ionization. “Cool” gas clouds (low temperature, neutral gas) can remain stable or collapse slowly. If they are ionized (for example, by nearby stars emitting ultraviolet radiation), the gas heats up, increasing pressure and preventing or disrupting collapse. The narrator hopes to preserve some of their own calm, neutral clouds but then reacts in horror as something ionizes them, ruining the delicate balance and ending their ability to “enjoy” stable gas clouds. But this is a natural result of star formation within and around a nebula again unforseen by the being who apparently set up the circumstances that led to all the cosmic evolution we see.

Transcript

[A glowing dot is in a field of clouds, speaking to itself.]
Dot: I think I did a good job with this universe.
Dot: Pressure waves dance through gas clouds.
Dot: They clump together and then pressure pushes them apart.
[The dot observes some more densely gathering of clouds.]
Dot: Oh weird, that big clump of clouds is staying together.
Dot: Their gravity is overcoming the pressure and more gas is falling in.
[More of the increasingly fragmentary clouds start to fall into a nascent star.]
Dot: It's not stopping!
Dot: The heat is rising but the collapse is only accelerating!
Dot: I messed up bad. I messed up bad.
[There is now a shining star in place of the dense field of clouds, with a few small clouds only at a distance.
Dot: NOOOOOOOO!!!
Dot: My beautiful clouds!
Dot: Ruined! It's all ruined!

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Discussion

This entire process is unconfirmed and needs citations. [citation needed] 66.154.219.128 20:26, 20 March 2026 (UTC)

Not sure if you're serious... but I rewrote some of the things that might have prompted this comment. 81.179.199.253 21:49, 20 March 2026 (UTC)

The something that ionized the gas clouds is presumably the star that formed. No second deity needed. 74.76.189.192 21:12, 20 March 2026 (UTC)

I dispense with that bit. What you obviously have here is a non-omniscient creator (or shaper-of-the-universe, at the very least) who is surprised by how things turn out when they had a much simpler (or at least different) idea of how things should have proceeded. I'm reminded of The Science of Discworld (once the Dean twiddles his fingers in the proto-Roundworld, and then the wizards discovering that things just like becoming spheres more than they expected) or perhaps something where a desired result went awry due to unforeseen external factors. 81.179.199.253 21:49, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
Is Randall a believer in Stupid Design? Barmar (talk) 22:42, 20 March 2026 (UTC)
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