by Anthony Barreiro » Wed Feb 20, 2013 12:38 am
Ann wrote:I like the colors and "textures" of this image!
The Small Magellanic Cloud is blue and loose. 47 Tuc is like a heap of salt, white in color, densest in the middle and with grains of salt spread around the main concentration. Note the smaller globular, NGC 362, to the (slightly lower) right of the Small Magellanic Cloud. This globular looks even more concentrated than 47 Tuc, yet still slightly grainy.
The comet looks like a drop of clear green liquid, leaving a trail of blue-gray smoke behind.
Beautiful!
Ann
47 Tuc looks too yellow to be salt. I would worry about what made the salt yellow! Are there mice in the pantry?
Thanks for pointing out NGC 362, I would have missed it otherwise. And what is the bright, slightly extended object that would make the upper left corner of a parallelogram with Comet Lemmon, NGC 362, and 47 Tuc? Is it just a bright foreground star?
[quote="Ann"]I like the colors and "textures" of this image! :D
The Small Magellanic Cloud is blue and loose. 47 Tuc is like a heap of salt, white in color, densest in the middle and with grains of salt spread around the main concentration. Note the smaller globular, NGC 362, to the (slightly lower) right of the Small Magellanic Cloud. This globular looks even more concentrated than 47 Tuc, yet still slightly grainy.
The comet looks like a drop of clear green liquid, leaving a trail of blue-gray smoke behind.
Beautiful!
Ann[/quote]
47 Tuc looks too yellow to be salt. I would worry about what made the salt yellow! Are there mice in the pantry?
Thanks for pointing out NGC 362, I would have missed it otherwise. And what is the bright, slightly extended object that would make the upper left corner of a parallelogram with Comet Lemmon, NGC 362, and 47 Tuc? Is it just a bright foreground star?