by Ann » Thu Apr 19, 2012 9:22 am
A few comments here.
Paul Haese, I like all the fascinating details seen in the thick gas cloud where there is various stages of star formation going on. I think our galaxy feels youthful when I see pictures like yours!
Lorenzo Comolli, that's an impressive auroral display! I like the green-illuminated red house in the foreground and the mountains in the background. Norway is a photogenic country!
Emil Ivanov, that's a very fine picture of the intrerplay between bright blue reflection nebulosity, faint red emission nebulosity and thick dark "tubes" of concentrated gas and dust, from which new stars can be born.
Alistair Symon, I like both your images. One is predominantly blue, one predominantly red, but both pay tribute to the indvidual characteristics of gas clouds in the Milky Way.
Jerry Lodriguss, right now your image won't open for me, but I've seen it before and admired it. So that is why the rings of Saturn look so very bright sometimes, and much fainter at other times?
Efrain Morales, it's interesting to see all the exposures that you combained into one finished color picture.
chapdelaine, that's a nicely detailed Hubble image of galaxy NGC 7217.
John Davis, I love that image! This is exactly the kind of image that makes me very, very happy. The details are so fascinating and the colors are wonderful!
Behyar Bakhshandeh, your Sun images are all very fine.
Lynn Hilborn, I like your ethereal space angel!
Don Goldman, starsurfer brought me a link to your images. I liked thenm very much! And this planetary nebula is both interesting in ints structure and delightful in its colors.
JL Dauvergne, your image really had me staring. Imagine being able to see both Orion and the Large Magellanic Cloud in the sky at the same time, and not even too far away from each other! That's a reminder for us northerners of how wonderful the sky can look from other latitudes. I like your other picture, too.
avdhoeven, you know that I love your processed version of the center of M94. This is a truly fascinating galaxy with an amazing range of populations, from old yellow stars in the nucleus to an almost unique sort of "green" intermediate stars in the inner bulge, to a remarkable large and brilliant blue ring interspersed with reddish-pink emission nebulae. Thank you so much for bringing us this picture!
Rothko, that's a truly interesting image of the Moon! Unfortunately I don't read Spanich, so I can't read more about it.
Thanks to everyone who contributed images here!
Ann
A few comments here.
Paul Haese, I like all the fascinating details seen in the thick gas cloud where there is various stages of star formation going on. I think our galaxy feels youthful when I see pictures like yours!
Lorenzo Comolli, that's an impressive auroral display! I like the green-illuminated red house in the foreground and the mountains in the background. Norway is a photogenic country!
Emil Ivanov, that's a very fine picture of the intrerplay between bright blue reflection nebulosity, faint red emission nebulosity and thick dark "tubes" of concentrated gas and dust, from which new stars can be born.
Alistair Symon, I like both your images. One is predominantly blue, one predominantly red, but both pay tribute to the indvidual characteristics of gas clouds in the Milky Way.
Jerry Lodriguss, right now your image won't open for me, but I've seen it before and admired it. So that is why the rings of Saturn look so very bright sometimes, and much fainter at other times?
Efrain Morales, it's interesting to see all the exposures that you combained into one finished color picture.
chapdelaine, that's a nicely detailed Hubble image of galaxy NGC 7217.
John Davis, I love that image! This is exactly the kind of image that makes me very, very happy. The details are so fascinating and the colors are wonderful!
Behyar Bakhshandeh, your Sun images are all very fine.
Lynn Hilborn, I like your ethereal space angel!
Don Goldman, starsurfer brought me a link to your images. I liked thenm very much! And this planetary nebula is both interesting in ints structure and delightful in its colors.
JL Dauvergne, your image really had me staring. Imagine being able to see both Orion and the Large Magellanic Cloud in the sky at the same time, and not even too far away from each other! That's a reminder for us northerners of how wonderful the sky can look from other latitudes. I like your other picture, too.
avdhoeven, you know that I love your processed version of the center of M94. This is a truly fascinating galaxy with an amazing range of populations, from old yellow stars in the nucleus to an almost unique sort of "green" intermediate stars in the inner bulge, to a remarkable large and brilliant blue ring interspersed with reddish-pink emission nebulae. Thank you so much for bringing us this picture!
Rothko, that's a truly interesting image of the Moon! Unfortunately I don't read Spanich, so I can't read more about it.
Thanks to everyone who contributed images here!
Ann