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Astronomy Picture of the Day (General/Chat)

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  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Messier 101

    05/16/2025 12:01:45 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 16 replies
    NASA ^ | 16 May, 2025 | Image Credit: NASA, ESA, CFHT, NOAO; Acknowledgement - K.Kuntz (GSFC), F.Bresolin (U.Hawaii), J.Trau
    Explanation: Big, beautiful spiral galaxy M101 is one of the last entries in Charles Messier's famous catalog, but definitely not one of the least. About 170,000 light-years across, this galaxy is enormous, almost twice the size of our own Milky Way. M101 was also one of the original spiral nebulae observed by Lord Rosse's large 19th century telescope, the Leviathan of Parsontown. Assembled from 51 exposures recorded by the Hubble Space Telescope in the 20th and 21st centuries, with additional data from ground based telescopes, this mosaic spans about 40,000 light-years across the central region of M101 in one of...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - A Plutonian Landscape

    05/15/2025 12:32:27 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 15 replies
    NASA ^ | 15 May, 2025 | Image Credit: NASA, Johns Hopkins Univ./APL, Southwest Research Institute
    Explanation: This shadowy landscape of majestic mountains and icy plains stretches toward the horizon on a small, distant world. It was captured from a range of about 18,000 kilometers when New Horizons looked back toward Pluto, 15 minutes after the spacecraft's closest approach on July 14, 2015. The dramatic, low-angle, near-twilight scene follows rugged mountains formally known as Norgay Montes from foreground left, and Hillary Montes along the horizon, giving way to smooth Sputnik Planum at right. Layers of Pluto's tenuous atmosphere are also revealed in the backlit view. With a strangely familiar appearance, the frigid terrain likely includes ices...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - NGC 1360: The Robin's Egg Nebula

    05/14/2025 11:51:33 AM PDT · by MtnClimber · 11 replies
    NASA ^ | 14 May, 2025 | Image Credit & Copyright: Andrea Iorio, Vikas Chander & ShaRA Team
    Explanation: This pretty nebula lies some 1,500 light-years away, its shape and color in this telescopic view reminiscent of a robin's egg. The cosmic cloud spans about 3 light-years, nestled securely within the boundaries of the southern constellation of the Furnace (Fornax). Recognized as a planetary nebula, egg-shaped NGC 1360 doesn't represent a beginning, though. Instead, it corresponds to a brief and final phase in the evolution of an aging star. In fact, visible at the center of the nebula, the central star of NGC 1360 is known to be a binary star system likely consisting of two evolved white...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Gaia Reconstructs a Top View of our Galaxy

    05/13/2025 1:16:19 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 23 replies
    NASA ^ | 13 May, 2025 | Illustration Credit: ESA, Gaia, DPAC, Stefan Payne-Wardenaar
    Explanation: What does our Milky Way Galaxy look like from the top? Because we are on the inside, humanity can’t get an actual picture. Recently, however, just such a map has been made using location data for over a billion stars from ESA’s Gaia mission. The resulting featured illustration shows that just like many other spiral galaxies, our Milky Way has distinct spiral arms. Our Sun and most of the bright stars we see at night are in just one arm: Orion. Gaia data bolsters previous indications that our Milky Way has more than two spiral arms. Our Galaxy's center...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Gaia Reconstructs a Side View of our Galaxy

    05/12/2025 11:26:00 AM PDT · by MtnClimber · 21 replies
    NASA ^ | 12 May, 2025 | Illustration Credit: ESA, Gaia, DPAC, Stefan Payne-Wardenaar
    Explanation: What does our Milky Way Galaxy look like from the side? Because we are on the inside, humanity can’t get an actual picture. Recently, however, just such a map has been made using location data for over a billion stars from ESA’s Gaia mission. The resulting featured illustration shows that just like many other spiral galaxies, our Milky Way has a very thin central disk. Our Sun and all the stars we see at night are in this disk. Although hypothesized before, perhaps more surprising is that the disk appears curved at the outer edges. The colors of our...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - The Surface of Venus from Venera 14

    05/11/2025 12:03:21 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 16 replies
    NASA ^ | 11 May, 2025 | Image Credit: Soviet Planetary Exploration Program, Venera 14; Processing & Copyright: Donald Mitche
    Explanation: If you could stand on Venus -- what would you see? Pictured is the view from Venera 14, a robotic Soviet lander which parachuted and air-braked down through the thick Venusian atmosphere in March of 1982. The desolate landscape it saw included flat rocks, vast empty terrain, and a featureless sky above Phoebe Regio near Venus' equator. On the lower left is the spacecraft's penetrometer used to make scientific measurements, while the light piece on the right is part of an ejected lens-cap. Enduring temperatures near 450 degrees Celsius and pressures 75 times that on Earth, the hardened Venera...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Yogi and Friends in 3D

    05/10/2025 11:28:12 AM PDT · by MtnClimber · 10 replies
    NASA ^ | 10 May, 2025 | Image Credit: Mars Pathfinder Mission, JPL, NASA
    Explanation: This picture from July 1997 shows a ramp from the Pathfinder lander, the Sojourner robot rover, deflated landing airbags, a couch, Barnacle Bill and Yogi Rock appear together in this 3D stereo view of the surface of Mars. Barnacle Bill is the rock just left of the house cat-sized, solar-paneled Sojourner. Yogi is the big friendly-looking boulder at top right. The "couch" is the angular rock shape visible near center on the horizon. Look at the image with red/blue glasses (or just hold a piece of clear red plastic over your left eye and blue or green over your...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - IXPE Explores a Black Hole Jet

    05/09/2025 2:20:04 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 9 replies
    NASA ^ | 9 May, 2025 | Illustration Credit: NASA, Pablo Garcia
    Explanation: How do black holes create X-rays? Answering this long-standing question was significantly advanced recently with data taken by NASA’s IXPE satellite. X-rays cannot exit a black hole, but they can be created in the energetic environment nearby, in particular by a jet of particles moving outward. By observing X-ray light arriving from near the supermassive black hole at the center of galaxy BL Lac, called a blazar, it was discovered that these X-rays lacked significant polarization, which is expected when created more by energetic electrons than protons. In the featured artistic illustration, a powerful jet is depicted emanating from...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day = M1: The Incredible Expanding Crab

    05/08/2025 1:26:55 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 9 replies
    NASA ^ | 8 May, 2025 | Image Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI; Jeff Hester (ASU), Allison Loll (ASU), Tea Temim (Princeton Uni
    Explanation: Cataloged as M1, the Crab Nebula is the first on Charles Messier's famous list of things which are not comets. In fact, the Crab Nebula is now known to be a supernova remnant, an expanding cloud of debris from the death explosion of a massive star. The violent birth of the Crab was witnessed by astronomers in the year 1054. Roughly 10 light-years across, the nebula is still expanding at a rate of about 1,500 kilometers per second. You can see the expansion by comparing these sharp images from the Hubble Space Telescope and James Webb Space Telescope. The...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Galaxy Wars: M81 versus M82

    05/07/2025 1:41:56 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 12 replies
    NASA ^ | 7 May, 2025 | Image Credit & Copyright: Collaborative Astrophotography Team (CAT)
    Explanation: In the upper left corner, surrounded by blue arms and dotted with red nebulas, is spiral galaxy M81. In the lower right corner, marked by a light central line and surrounded by red glowing gas, is irregular galaxy M82. This stunning vista shows these two mammoth galaxies locked in gravitational combat, as they have been for the past billion years. The gravity from each galaxy dramatically affects the other during each hundred-million-year pass. Last go-round, M82's gravity likely raised density waves rippling around M81, resulting in the richness of M81's spiral arms. But M81 left M82 with violent star...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - The Doubly Warped World of Binary Black Holes

    05/06/2025 12:05:53 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 9 replies
    NASA ^ | 6 May, 2025 | Scientific Visualization Credit: NASA, GSFC, Jeremy Schnittman & Brian P. Powell; Text: Francis J. R
    Explanation: If one black hole looks strange, what about two? Light rays from accretion disks around a pair of orbiting supermassive black holes make their way through the warped space-time produced by extreme gravity in this detailed computer visualization. The simulated accretion disks have been given different false color schemes, red for the disk surrounding a 200-million-solar-mass black hole, and blue for the disk surrounding a 100-million-solar-mass black hole. For these masses, though, both accretion disks would actually emit most of their light in the ultraviolet. The video allows us to see both sides of each black hole at the...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Planet Lines Across Water

    05/05/2025 12:08:59 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 5 replies
    NASA ^ | 5 May, 2025 | Image Credit & Copyright: Jose Antonio Hervas
    Explanation: What’s causing those lines? Objects in the sky sometimes appear reflected as lines across water — but why? If the water’s surface is smooth, then reflected objects would appear similarly -- as spots. But if the water is choppy, then there are many places where light from the object can reflect off the water and still come to you -- and so together form, typically, a line. The same effect is frequently seen for the Sun just before sunset and just after sunrise. Pictured about 10 days ago in Ibiza, Spain, images of the rising Moon, Venus (top), and...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Spin up of a Supermassive Black Hole

    05/04/2025 12:28:18 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 10 replies
    NASA ^ | 4 May, 2025 | Illustration Credit: Robert Hurt, NASA/JPL-Caltech
    Explanation: How fast can a black hole spin? If any object made of regular matter spins too fast -- it breaks apart. But a black hole might not be able to break apart -- and its maximum spin rate is really unknown. Theorists usually model rapidly rotating black holes with the Kerr solution to Einstein's General Theory of Relativity, which predicts several amazing and unusual things. Perhaps its most easily testable prediction, though, is that matter entering a maximally rotating black hole should be last seen orbiting at near the speed of light, as seen from far away. This prediction...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Titan: Moon over Saturn

    05/03/2025 2:27:48 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 16 replies
    NASA ^ | 3 May, 2025 | Image Credit: NASA, JPL-Caltech, Space Science Institute
    Explanation: Like Earth's moon, Saturn's largest moon Titan is locked in synchronous rotation with its planet. This mosaic of images recorded by the Cassini spacecraft in May of 2012 shows its anti-Saturn side, the side always facing away from the ringed gas giant. The only moon in the solar system with a dense atmosphere, Titan is the only solar system world besides Earth known to have standing bodies of liquid on its surface and an earthlike cycle of liquid rain and evaporation. Its high altitude layer of atmospheric haze is evident in the Cassini view of the 5,000 kilometer diameter...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Young Star Cluster NGC 346

    05/02/2025 12:50:11 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 7 replies
    NASA ^ | 2 May, 2025 | Science - NASA, ESA, CSA, Olivia C. Jones (UK ATC), Guido De Marchi (ESTEC), Margaret Meixner (USRA)
    Explanation: The most massive young star cluster in the Small Magellanic Cloud is NGC 346, embedded in our small satellite galaxy's largest star forming region some 210,000 light-years distant. Of course the massive stars of NGC 346 are short lived, but very energetic. Their winds and radiation sculpt the edges of the region's dusty molecular cloud triggering star-formation within. The star forming region also appears to contain a large population of infant stars. A mere 3 to 5 million years old and not yet burning hydrogen in their cores, the infant stars are strewn about the embedded star cluster. This...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - MESSENGER's Last Day on Mercury

    05/01/2025 2:27:32 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 36 replies
    NASA ^ | 1 May, 2025 | Image Credit: NASA, Johns Hopkins Univ. APL, Arizona State Univ., CIW
    Explanation: The first to orbit inner planet Mercury, the MESSENGER spacecraft came to rest on this region of Mercury's surface on April 30, 2015. Constructed from MESSENGER image and laser altimeter data, the projected scene looks north over the northeastern rim of the broad, lava filled Shakespeare basin. The large, 48 kilometer (30 mile) wide crater Janacek is near the upper left edge. Terrain height is color coded with red regions about 3 kilometers above blue ones. MESSENGER'S final orbit was predicted to end near the center, with the spacecraft impacting the surface at nearly 4 kilometers per second (over...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - A Happy Sky over Bufa Hill in Mexico

    04/30/2025 12:37:00 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 11 replies
    NASA ^ | 30 Apr, 2025 | Image Credit & Copyright: Daniel Korona
    Explanation: Sometimes, the sky itself seems to smile. A few days ago, visible over much of the world, an unusual superposition of our Moon with the planets Venus and Saturn created just such an iconic facial expression. Specifically, a crescent Moon appeared to make a happy face on the night sky when paired with seemingly nearby planets. Pictured is the scene as it appeared over Zacatecas, México, with distinctive Bufa Hill in the foreground. On the far right and farthest in the distance is the planet Saturn. Significantly closer and visible to Saturn's upper left is Venus, the brightest planet...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Saturn's Rings Appear to Disappear

    04/29/2025 12:38:16 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 20 replies
    NASA ^ | 29 Apr, 2025 | Image Credit & Copyright: Natan Fontes
    Explanation: Where are Saturn's ears? Galileo is credited, in 1610, as the first person to see Saturn's rings. Testing out Lipperhey's recently co-invented telescope, Galileo did not know what they were and so called them "ears". The mystery deepened in 1612, when Saturn's ears mysteriously disappeared. Today we know exactly what happened: from the perspective of the Earth, Saturn's rings had become too thin to see. The same drama plays out every 15 years because Saturn, like Earth, undergoes tilt-driven seasons. This means that as Saturn goes around the Sun, its equator and rings can tilt noticeably toward the Sun...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Gum 37 and the Southern Tadpoles

    04/28/2025 12:51:13 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 7 replies
    NASA ^ | 28 Apr, 2025 | Image Credit & Copyright: Francis Bozon & Cecil Navick (AstroA. R. O.)
    Explanation: This cosmic skyscape features glowing gas and dark dust clouds alongside the young stars of NGC 3572. A beautiful emission nebula and star cluster, it sails far southern skies within the nautical constellation Carina. Stars from NGC 3572 are toward top center in the telescopic frame that would measure about 100 light-years across at the cluster's estimated distance of 9,000 light-years. The visible interstellar gas and dust, shown in colors of the Hubble palette, is part of the star cluster's natal molecular cloud, itself cataloged as Gum 37. Dense streamers of material within the nebula, eroded by stellar winds...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - IC 418: The Spirograph Nebula

    04/27/2025 1:23:02 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 8 replies
    NASA ^ | 27 Apr, 2025 | Image Credit: NASA, ESA, and the Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA); Acknowledgement: R. Sahai (JPL)
    Explanation: What is creating the strange texture of IC 418? Dubbed the Spirograph Nebula for its resemblance to drawings from a cyclical drawing tool, planetary nebula IC 418 shows patterns that are not well understood. Perhaps they are related to chaotic winds from the variable central star, which changes brightness unpredictably in just a few hours. By contrast, evidence indicates that only a few million years ago, IC 418 was probably a well-understood star similar to our Sun. Only a few thousand years ago, IC 418 was probably a common red giant star. Since running out of nuclear fuel, though,...