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Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Sun Dec 01, 2019 3:48 pm
by bystander
Have you seen a great image or video somewhere that you think would make a great APOD? Nominate it for APOD! Please post as much information here as you have about the image/video with a link to any source(s) for it you know of here, and the editors will take a look.
When posting the image itself, please do not post anything larger than a thumbnail here; please honor the copyright holder's copyright.
Please keep hotlinked images under 400K.
Thank you!
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Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Sun Dec 01, 2019 5:57 pm
by starsurfer
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Sun Dec 01, 2019 6:00 pm
by starsurfer
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Sun Dec 01, 2019 6:03 pm
by starsurfer
Serpens Cloud
http://www.caelumobservatory.com/galler ... wide.shtml
Copyright: Adam Block/Steward Observatory/University of Arizona
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Sun Dec 01, 2019 6:05 pm
by starsurfer
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Sun Dec 01, 2019 6:08 pm
by starsurfer
Jones 1 and Arp 46
http://www.capella-observatory.com/Imag ... Jones1.htm
Copyright: Josef Pöpsel, Stefan Binnewies and Frank Sackenheim
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Sun Dec 01, 2019 6:09 pm
by starsurfer
ESO: The Stars of the Milky Way (La Silla)
Posted: Mon Dec 02, 2019 5:09 pm
by bystander
The Stars of the Milky Way
ESO Picture of the Week | 2019 Dec 02
Seen here, the majestic
Milky Way rises above ESO’s
La Silla Observatory in Chile, its bright band punctuated by red regions of
star formation and dark, weaving filaments of
interstellar dust. Two of the site’s telescopes, the
1-metre Schmidt telescope (left) and the
MPG-ESO 2.2-metre telescope (right), are are visible as well.
While all of the stars in the sky belong to the Milky Way galaxy, we commonly refer to this thick streak across the sky as “the Milky Way”. This is because of our position within our home galaxy: the Solar System sits on one of our galaxy’s
spiral arms and is located roughly
two-thirds of the distance between the Milky Way’s centre and its peripheries. The galaxy itself is shaped a little like a giant pancake with a bright bulge in the centre, with almost all of its constituent stars, gas, dust, planets, and so on lying within a
thin disc. The “Milky Way” — the bright strip we see painted across the night sky in this image — is actually our view of this disc, which is why it appears to be so much brighter and more impressive than the surrounding sky, as we look inwards towards the densely-packed
galactic centre.
To the centre-right of the frame, just above the
MPG-ESO 2.2-metre telescope, is one of our nearest neighbours in space, a
dwarf galaxy known as the
Large Magellanic Cloud. The pink and green glow visible just above the horizon is known as
airglow, and is caused by excited atoms in the Earth’s upper atmosphere.
HEIC: A Dramatic Demise (NGC 5468)
Posted: Mon Dec 02, 2019 5:17 pm
by bystander
A Dramatic Demise
ESA Hubble Picture of the Week | 2019 Dec 02
Some of the most dramatic events in the Universe occur when certain stars die — and explode catastrophically in the process.
Such explosions, known as
supernovae, mainly occur in a couple of ways: either a massive star depletes its fuel at the end of its life, become dynamically unstable and unable to support its bulk, collapses inwards, and then
violently explodes; or a
white dwarf in an orbiting stellar couple syphons more mass off its companion than it is able to support, igniting runaway
nuclear fusion in its core and beginning the
supernova process. Both types result in an intensely bright object in the sky that can rival the light of a whole galaxy.
In the last 20 years the galaxy
NGC 5468, visible in this image, has hosted a number of observed supernovae of both the aforementioned types:
SN 1999cp,
SN 2002cr,
SN 2002ed,
SN 2005P, and
SN 2018dfg. Despite being just over 130 million light-years away, the orientation of the galaxy with respect to us makes it easier to spot these new ‘stars’ as they appear; we see
NGC 5468 face on, meaning we can see the galaxy’s loose, open spiral pattern in beautiful detail in images such as this one from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope.
AAS: Learning about the Sun from Historical Observations
Posted: Tue Dec 03, 2019 1:04 am
by bystander
Learning about the Sun from Historical Observations
AAS Nova Featured Image | 2019 Dec 02
... full view of the observatory of
Johannes Hevelius, a Polish astronomer who lived in the 1600s. This print is found in Hevelius’s book
Selenographia and is reproduced courtesy of the Library of the Astronomical Observatory of the Spanish Navy in a recent solar activity research study led by Victor Carrasco (University of Extremadura, Spain and Southwest Research Institute). Hevelius used his observatory to chart daily observations of sunspots (note ... the projection of the Sun’s disk from the telescope coming through the left wall onto a vertical screen at the right). His records from 1642 to 1645 are the only systematic sunspot observations we have from just before the
Maunder Minimum, a prolonged period of reduced solar activity between 1645 and 1715. Carrasco and collaborators have now reevaluated Hevelius’s observations, using them to explore the first hints of this quiet time for the Sun. For more information, check out the original article below.
Sunspot Characteristics at the Onset of the Maunder
Minimum Based on the Observations of Hevelius ~ V.M.S. Carrasco
et al
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Sun Dec 08, 2019 10:53 am
by starsurfer
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Sun Dec 08, 2019 10:56 am
by starsurfer
ESO 240-10 and ESO 240-11
http://www.chart32.de/index.php/component/k2/item/292
Copyright: CHART32
Processing: Johannes Schedler
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Mon Dec 09, 2019 2:59 pm
by starsurfer
ESO: Cloudy with a Chance of Dust (RCW 36)
Posted: Mon Dec 09, 2019 6:13 pm
by bystander
Cloudy with a Chance of Dust
ESO Picture of the Week | 2019 Dec 09
This cloud-strewn new image of
RCW 36 (or Gum 20) was captured by ESO’s Focal Reducer and low dispersion Spectrograph (
FORS). It shows one of the sites of massive-star formation closest to our Solar System, about 2300 light-years away. Located in the constellation of
Vela (
The Sails), the
RCW 36 emission nebula is only part of an even larger star formation complex, known as the
Vela Molecular Ridge.
Some areas in the clouds of RCW 36 are dense enough to block out background light, creating patches and wisps of inky black. Despite the dark appearance of these clouds, they are the only places in the Universe in which
star formation occurs; clumps of molecular hydrogen and
cosmic dust collapse and come together to form stars encircled by small families of planets, as in our own Solar System.
FORS is mounted on ESO’s
Very Large Telescope, one of the world's most advanced astronomical observatories. This image was selected as part of the ESO
Cosmic Gems programme, an initiative that produces images of scientifically interesting and visually attractive objects using
ESO telescopes for the purposes of education and public outreach. The programme makes use of telescope time that cannot be used for science observations. All data collected may also be suitable for scientific purposes, and are made available to astronomers through ESO’s
science archive.
HEIC: Galactic Diversity (NGC 3175)
Posted: Mon Dec 09, 2019 6:26 pm
by bystander
Galactic Diversity
ESA Hubble Picture of the Week | 2019 Dec 09
NGC 3175 is located around 50 million light-years away in the constellation of
Antlia (
The Air Pump). The galaxy can be seen slicing across the frame in this image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, with its mix of bright patches of glowing gas, dark lanes of dust, bright core, and whirling, pinwheeling arms coming together to paint a beautiful celestial scene.
The galaxy is the eponymous member of the NGC 3175 group, which has been called a
nearby analogue for the
Local Group. The Local Group contains our very own home galaxy, the Milky Way, and around 50 others — a mix of spiral, irregular, and dwarf galaxies. The NGC 3175 group contains a couple of large spiral galaxies — the subject of this image, and NGC 3137 — and numerous lower-mass spiral and satellite galaxies.
Galaxy groups are some of the most common galactic gatherings in the cosmos, and they comprise 50 or so galaxies all bound together by gravity.
This image comprises observations from Hubble’s
Wide Field Camera 3.
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Tue Dec 10, 2019 3:36 pm
by starsurfer
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Tue Dec 10, 2019 3:38 pm
by starsurfer
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Thu Dec 12, 2019 5:18 pm
by starsurfer
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Thu Dec 12, 2019 5:20 pm
by starsurfer
Hubble's Variable Nebula (NGC 2261)
https://pbase.com/tango33/image/169533750
Copyright: Kfir Simon
The variability of this nebula was discovered by Edwin Hubble.
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Thu Dec 12, 2019 6:41 pm
by Ann
I love this image! Not only does it show us the beautiful blue reflection nebula IC 447, but we can also see the large reddish-magenta emission nebula associated with the star formation of the Cone Nebula-Christmas Tree region, where O-type star S Monocerotis provides most of the ionization.
But I also love that we can see the old, rich, yellow open cluster Trumpler 5 at upper center! Note how many stars there are in the cluster, how similarly bright many of them seem to be (with the exception of one orange giant), and note how yellow-orange the stars are. Yes, they are dust-reddened, but still.
P. Donati, G. Cocozza, A. Bragaglia and E. Pancino wrote:
The old, metal-poor, anticentre open cluster Trumpler 5
As part of a long-term programme, we analyse the evolutionary status and properties of the old and populous open cluster Trumpler 5 (Tr 5), located in the Galactic anticentre direction, almost on the Galactic plane...
Our analysis shows that Tr 5 has subsolar metallicity, with [Fe/H] = −0.403 ± 0.006 dex (derived from spectroscopy), age between 2.9 and 4 Gyr (the lower age is found using stellar models without core overshooting), reddening E(B − V) in the range 0.60–0.66 mag complicated by a differential pattern (of the order of ∼±0.1 mag), and distance modulus (m − M)0 = 12.4 ± 0.1 mag.
So the Trumpler 5 cluster is between 2,9 and 4 billion years old, which makes it younger than the Sun, but its stars formed from gas that was "purer" and "less polluted by supernova explosions and red giant atmospheric shedding" than the gas that formed the Solar system. Trumpler 5 is located on the outskirts of the visible disk of our galaxy, which may explain why it is so relatively metal-poor. The distance to Trumpler 5 is ~
11,000 light-years, which makes it about 1.5 times more distant than
the Double Cluster in Perseus. To me, the "
yellow confetti" appearance of its stars makes this cluster an iconic image of an old open cluster.
Amazing!
Ann
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Sat Dec 14, 2019 12:27 pm
by starsurfer
NGC 7294
http://www.chart32.de/index.php/component/k2/item/279
Copyright: CHART32
Processing: Bernd Flach-Wilken
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Sun Dec 15, 2019 12:15 pm
by starsurfer
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Sun Dec 15, 2019 8:55 pm
by Ann
Interacting galaxies NGC 5394/5395
https://scitechdaily.com/a-galactic-dan ... ears-away/
Credit: NSF’s National Optical-Infrared Astronomy Research Laboratory/Gemini Observatory/AURA
The picture is a four color, optical + infrared image of this interacting pair, which is also known as "The Heron".
Ann
Re: Found Images: 2019 December
Posted: Mon Dec 16, 2019 2:24 pm
by starsurfer
ESO: Going Underground (VLT)
Posted: Mon Dec 16, 2019 5:21 pm
by bystander
Going Underground
ESO Picture of the Week | 2019 Dec 16
Difficult as it may be, given the view above, when at
Paranal Observatory make sure you keep your eyes on the ground — or you might just take a tumble. This Picture of the Week shows an entrance to one of the laboratories beneath the ESO’s Very Large Telescope (
VLT) platform, used to carry out an astronomical technique known as
interferometry.
The VLT is composed of four large
Unit Telescopes and four smaller
Auxiliary Telescopes (ATs) — two of the latter are imaged here. Astronomers can use various combinations of these telescopes to pool their observing power and, using the technique of interferometry, achieve imaging resolutions much greater than is possible by any of them alone. This clever trick is performed beneath the platform in a network of tunnels filled with specialised equipment to direct and process the light gathered by the telescopes.
Paranal Observatory is located in northern Chile atop its mountain namesake,
Cerro Paranal. The remote location and high altitude here provide ideal conditions for the kinds of astronomy undertaken at the facility, whether that be peering into
star nurseries in the Milky Way or observing the ferociously
active cores of distant galaxies.