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Niceguy2
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Date Posted:03/06/2014 11:29 PMCopy HTML

I really love this site and 
this is an awesome photo!
Kind of makes me realize how
small this planet Earth is....
Joe


Astronomy Picture of the Day

Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.

2014 March 6
See Explanation.  Clicking on the picture will download the highest resolution version available.

NGC 1333 Stardust 
Image Credit & Copyright
Al Howard

Explanation: NGC 1333 is seen in visible light as a reflection nebula, dominated by bluish hues characteristic of starlight reflected by dust. A mere 1,000 light-years distant toward the heroic constellationPerseus, it lies at the edge of a large, star-forming molecular cloud. This striking close-up view spans about two full moons on the sky or just over 15 light-years at the estimated distance of NGC 1333. It shows details of the dusty region along with hints of contrasting red emission from Herbig-Haro objects, jets and shocked glowing gas emanating from recently formed stars. In fact, NGC 1333 contains hundreds of stars less than a million years old, most still hidden from optical telescopes by the pervasive stardust. The chaotic environment may be similar to one in which our own Sun formed over 4.5 billion years ago.

Niceguy2 #6051
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Re:Astronomy Picture of the Day

Date Posted:08/21/2025 1:48 AMCopy HTML

2025 August 20
A deep sky is shown with the band of our Milky Way Galaxy
running from the upper left to the lower right. The streaks
or many curved meteors are seen. In the foreground a beach
is seen with an unusual rock outcrop that has an opening.
Please see the explanation for more detailed information.

Perseid Meteors from Durdle Door
Image Credit & Copyright: Josh Dury

Explanation: What are those curved arcs in the sky? Meteors -- specifically, meteors from this year's Perseid meteor shower. Over the past few weeks, after the sky darkened, many images of Perseid meteors were captured separately and merged into a single frame, taken earlier. Although the meteors all traveled on straight paths, these paths appear slightly curved by the wide-angle lens of the capturing camera. The meteor streaks can all be traced back to a single point on the sky called the radiant, here just off the top of the frame in the constellation of Perseus. The same camera took a deep image of the background sky that brought up the central band of our Milky Way galaxy running nearly vertically through the featured image's center. The limestone arch in the foreground in DorsetEngland is known as Durdle Door, a name thought to survive from a thousand years ago.


Niceguy2 #6052
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Re:Astronomy Picture of the Day

Date Posted:08/22/2025 2:34 AMCopy HTML

2025 August 21
See Explanation.  Clicking on the picture will download
the highest resolution version available.

Mostly Perseids
Image Credit & Copyright: Klaus Pillwatsch

Explanation: In this predawn skyscape recorded during the early morning hours of August 13, mostly Perseid meteors are raining down on planet Earth. You can easily identify the Perseid meteor streaks. They're the ones with trails that seem to converge on the annual meteor shower's radiant, a spot in the heroic constellation Perseus, located off the top of the frame. That's the direction in Earth's sky that looks along the orbit of this meteor shower's parent, periodic Comet Swift-Tuttle. Of course the scene is a composite, a combination of about 500 digital exposures to capture meteors registered with a single base frame exposure. But all exposures were taken during a period of around 2.5 hours from a wind farm near Mönchhof, Burgenland, Austria. Red lights on the individual wind turbine towers dot the foreground. In their spectacular close conjunction, bright planets Jupiter and Venus are poised above the eastern horizon.


Niceguy2 #6053
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Re:Astronomy Picture of the Day

Date Posted:08/23/2025 3:03 AMCopy HTML

2025 August 22
See Explanation.  Clicking on the picture will download
the highest resolution version available.

A Tale of Two Nebulae
Image Credit & Copyright: Kent Biggs

Explanation: This colorful telescopic view towards the musical northern constellation Lyra reveals the faint outer halos and brighter central ring-shaped region of M57, popularly known as the Ring Nebula. To modern astronomers M57 is a well-known planetary nebula. With a central ring about one light-year across, M57 is definitely not a planet though, but the gaseous shroud of one of the Milky Way's dying sun-like stars. Roughly the same apparent size as M57, the fainter and more often overlooked barred spiral galaxy at the left is IC 1296. In fact, over 100 years ago IC 1296 would have been known as a spiral nebula. By chance the pair are in the same field of view, and while they appear to have similar sizes they are actually very far apart. At a distance of a mere 2,000 light-years M57 is well within our own Milky Way galaxy. Extragalactic IC 1296 (aka PGC62532) is more like 200,000,000 light-years distant. That's about 100,000 times farther away than M57 but since they appear roughly similar in size, former spiral nebula IC 1296 must also be about 100,000 times larger than planetary nebula M57. Look closely at the sharp 21st century astroimage to spot even more distant background galaxies scattered through the frame.


Niceguy2 #6054
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Re:Astronomy Picture of the Day

Date Posted:08/24/2025 1:42 AMCopy HTML

2025 August 23
See Explanation.  Clicking on the picture will download
the highest resolution version available.

Fishing for the Moon
Image Credit & Copyright: Marco Bellelli

Explanation: How big is planet Earth's Moon? Compared to other moons of the Solar System, it's number 5 on the largest to smallest ranked list, following Jupiter's moon Ganymede, Saturn's moon Titan, and Jovian moons Callisto and Io. Continuing the list, the Moon comes before Jupiter's Europa and Neptune's Triton. It's also larger than dwarf planets Pluto and Eris. With a diameter of 3,475 kilometers the Moon is about 1/4 the size of Earth though, and that does make it the largest moon when compared to the size of its parent Solar System planet. Of course in this serene, twilight sea and skyscape, August's rising Full Moon still appears small enough to be caught in the nets of an ancient fishing rig. The telephoto snapshot was taken along the Italian Costa dei Trabocchi, on the Adriatic Sea.


Niceguy2 #6055
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Re:Astronomy Picture of the Day

Date Posted:08/25/2025 2:29 AMCopy HTML

2025 August 24
he featured image shows the center of the Crab Nebula
in colors mapped to Hubble, Chandra, and Spitzer space 
telescopes. The Crab pulsar appears in the center surrounded
by a spinning disk.
Please see the explanation for more detailed information.

The Spinning Pulsar of the Crab Nebula
Image Credit: NASA: X-ray: Chandra (CXC), Optical: Hubble (STScI), Infrared: Spitzer (JPL-Caltech)

Explanation: At the core of the Crab Nebula lies a city-sized, magnetized neutron star spinning 30 times a second. Known as the Crab Pulsar, it is the bright spot in the center of the gaseous swirl at the nebula's core. About twelve light-years across, the spectacular picture frames the glowing gas, cavities and swirling filaments near the Crab Nebula's center. The featured picture combines visible light from the Hubble Space Telescope in purple, X-ray light from the Chandra X-ray Observatory in blue, and infrared light from the Spitzer Space Telescope in red. Like a cosmic dynamo, the Crab pulsar powers the emission from the nebula, driving a shock wave through surrounding material and accelerating the spiraling electrons. With more mass than the Sun and the density of an atomic nucleus,the spinning pulsar is the collapsed core of a massive star that exploded. The outer parts of the Crab Nebula are the expanding remnants of the star's component gases. The supernova explosion was witnessed on planet Earth in the year 1054.


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Re:Astronomy Picture of the Day

Date Posted:08/26/2025 12:57 AMCopy HTML

2025 August 25
A starfield surrounds the bright blue stars of a
star cluster: the Pleiades star cluster. Nearly horizontally
across the cluster is a bright green streak, most likely
a meteor. 
Please see the explanation for more detailed information.

The Meteor and the Star Cluster
Image Credit & Copyright: Yousif Alqasimi & Essa Al Jasmi

Explanation: Sometimes even the sky surprises you. To see more stars and faint nebulosity in the Pleiades star cluster (M45), long exposures are made. Many times, less interesting items appear on the exposures that were not intended -- but later edited out. These include stuck pixels, cosmic ray hits, frames with bright clouds or Earth's Moonairplane trailslens flaresfaint satellite trails, and even insect trails. Sometimes, though, something really interesting is caught by chance. That was just the case a few weeks ago in al-UlaSaudi Arabia when a bright meteor streaked across during an hour-long exposure of the Pleiades. Along with the famous bright blue stars, less famous and less bright blue stars, and blue-reflecting dust surrounding the star cluster, the fast rock fragment created a distinctive green glow, likely due to vaporized metals.


Niceguy2 #6057
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Re:Astronomy Picture of the Day

Date Posted:08/27/2025 1:34 AMCopy HTML

2025 August 26
See Explanation.  Clicking on the picture will download
 the highest resolution version available.

M83: The Thousand-Ruby Galaxy
Image Credit: Subaru Telescope (NAOJ), Hubble Space Telescope,
European Southern Observatory - Processing & Copyright: Robert Gendler

Explanation: Big, bright, and beautiful, spiral galaxy M83 lies a mere twelve million light-years away, near the southeastern tip of the very long constellation Hydra. Prominent spiral arms traced by dark dust lanes and blue star clusters lend this galaxy its popular name, The Southern Pinwheel. But reddish star forming regions that dot the sweeping arms highlighted in this sparkling color composite also suggest another nickname, The Thousand-Ruby Galaxy. About 40,000 light-years across, M83 is a member of a group of galaxies that includes active galaxy Centaurus A. In fact, the core of M83 itself is bright at x-ray energies, showing a high concentration of neutron stars and black holes left from an intense burst of star formation. This sharp composite color image also features spiky foreground Milky Way stars and distant background galaxies. The image data was taken from the Subaru Telescope, the European Southern Observatory's Wide Field Imager camera, and the Hubble Legacy Archive.


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Re:Astronomy Picture of the Day

Date Posted:08/28/2025 2:15 AMCopy HTML

2025 August 27
A dark field has a series of light-colored 
elliptical rings in the center. Between two of 
the rings is a yellow-colored spot. 
Please see the explanation for more detailed information.

WISPIT 2b: Exoplanet Carves Gap in Birth Disk
Image Credit: ESOVLTSPHERE;
Processing & Copyright: ESORichelle van Capelleveen (Leiden Obs.et al.;
Text: Ogetay Kayali (MTU)

Explanation: That yellow spot -- what is it? It's a young planet outside our Solar System. The featured image from the Very Large Telescope in Chile surprisingly captures a distant scene much like our own Solar System's birth, some 4.5 billion years ago. Although we can't look into the past and see Earth's formation directly, telescopes let us watch similar processes unfolding around distant stars. At the center of this frame lies a young Sun-like star, hidden behind a coronagraph that blocks its bright glare. Surrounding the star is a bright, dusty protoplanetary disk -- the raw material of planets. Gaps and concentric rings mark where a newborn world is gathering gas and dust under its gravity, clearing the way as it orbits the star. Although astronomers have imaged disk-embedded planets before, this is the first-ever observation of an exoplanet actively carving a gap within a disk -- the earliest direct glimpse of planetary sculpting in action.


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Re:Astronomy Picture of the Day

Date Posted:08/29/2025 2:24 AMCopy HTML

2025 August 28
See Explanation.  Clicking on the picture will download
the highest resolution version available.

Galaxies, Stars, and Dust
Image Credit & Copyright: Robert Eder

Explanation: This well-composed telescopic field of view covers over a Full Moon on the sky toward the high-flying constellation Pegasus. Of course the brighter stars show diffraction spikes, the commonly seen effect of internal supports in reflecting telescopes, and lie well within our own Milky Way galaxy. The faint but pervasive clouds of interstellar dust ride above the galactic plane and dimly reflect the Milky Way's starlight. Known as galactic cirrus or integrated flux nebulae they are associated with the Milky Way's molecular clouds. In fact, the diffuse cloud cataloged as MBM 54, less than a thousand light-years distant, fills the scene. The galaxy seemingly tangled in the dusty cloud is the striking spiral galaxy NGC 7497. It's some 60 million light-years away, though. Seen almost edge-on near the center of the field, NGC 7497's own spiral arms and dust lanes echo the colors of stars and dust in our own Milky Way.


Niceguy2 #6060
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Re:Astronomy Picture of the Day

Date Posted:08/30/2025 2:06 AMCopy HTML

2025 August 29
See Explanation.  Clicking on the picture will download
the highest resolution version available.

A Dark Veil in Ophiuchus
Image Credit & Copyright: Katelyn Beecroft

Explanation: The diffuse hydrogen-alpha glow of emission region Sh2-27 fills this cosmic scene. The field of view spans nearly 3 degrees across the nebula-rich constellation Ophiuchus toward the central Milky Way. A Dark Veil of wispy interstellar dust clouds draped across the foreground is chiefly identified as LDN 234 and LDN 204 from the 1962 Catalog of Dark Nebulae by American astronomer Beverly Lynds. Sh2-27 itself is the large but faint HII region surrounding runaway O-type star Zeta Ophiuchi. Along with the Zeta Oph HII region, LDN 234 and LDN 204 are likely 500 or so light-years away. At that distance, this telescopic frame would be about 25 light-years wide.


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