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Author: naen

Amazing Space SnapShots!

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Post time 14-10-2009 01:48 PM | Show all posts



Galactic Nursery

Clusters of infant stars have formed a ring around the core of the barred-spiral galaxy NGC 4314, which is billions of years old. This inner region appears much like a miniature spiral galaxy itself, complete with dust lanes and spiral arms.
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Post time 14-10-2009 01:48 PM | Show all posts



Circle of Life

Stars in various stages of their life cycles are revealed in this stunning Hubble picture of the giant galactic nebula NGC 3603.

Cantiknya....
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Post time 14-10-2009 01:50 PM | Show all posts


Papillion

The M 2-9 nebula is an example of a "butterfly," or bipolar planetary nebula, though its more revealing name might be the "Twin Jet Nebula."

Pretty..
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Post time 14-10-2009 01:53 PM | Show all posts


Ring of Fire

Located 190,000 light years away in the Small Magellanic Cloud galaxy, a massive star exploded 1,000 years ago. What remains is a billion times more oxygen than what's in Earth's oceans and atmosphere.

Not a ring of cloud okay..
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Post time 14-10-2009 01:55 PM | Show all posts


Change of Face

Eta Carinae is the brightest object in the Milky Way, but because it's very unstable, its visibility from Earth changes. Astronomers believe the yellow horseshoe is from a very large explosion 1,000 years ago.
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Post time 14-10-2009 01:56 PM | Show all posts


Creative Violence

This web of gas is the remnant of the Cassiopeia A supernova. Different colors represent silicon, sulfur and iron. Supernovae create and disperse elements like these.
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Post time 14-10-2009 01:56 PM | Show all posts


Burning Bubbles

Located 60,000 light-years away, the two Antennae galaxies collide, and form bright orange, oval-shaped clouds of supernovae gases thousands of light years in diameter.

Cantik..
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Post time 14-10-2009 01:58 PM | Show all posts


Universal Javelin

The giant black hole, Pictor A throws X-rays 360,000 light years across space. The head of its ephemeral spike is eight times bigger than the Milky Way.
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Post time 14-10-2009 02:06 PM | Show all posts


The Tarantula Nebula (January 2004)

Spitzer Space Telescope captured in stunning detail the spidery filaments and newborn stars of the Tarantula Nebula, a rich star-forming region also known as 30 Doradus. This cloud of glowing dust and gas is located in the Large Magellanic Cloud, the nearest galaxy to our own Milky Way, and is visible primarily from the Southern Hemisphere. This image of an interstellar cauldron provides a snapshot of the complex physical processes and chemistry that govern the birth -- and death -- of stars. At the heart of the nebula is a compact cluster of stars, known as R136, which contains very massive and young stars. The brightest of these blue super giant stars are up to 100 times more massive than the Sun, and are at least 100,000 times more luminous. These stars will live fast and die young, at least by astronomical standards, exhausting their nuclear fuel in a few million years.
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Post time 14-10-2009 02:09 PM | Show all posts


Valentine's Day Treat

A cluster of newborn stars herald their birth in this interstellar Valentine's Day commemorative picture obtained with NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. These bright young stars are found in a rosebud-shaped (and rose-colored) nebulosity known as NGC 7129. The star cluster and its associated nebula are located at a distance of 3300 light-years in the constellation Cepheus. A recent census of the cluster reveals the presence of 130 young stars. The stars formed from a massive cloud of gas and dust that contains enough raw materials to create a thousand Sun-like stars. In a process that astronomers still poorly understand, fragments of this molecular cloud became so cold and dense that they collapsed into stars. Most stars in our Milky Way galaxy are thought to form in such clusters

Love it!!
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Post time 14-10-2009 02:10 PM | Show all posts
Post Last Edit by beautiful_faith at 14-10-2009 14:11



Life and Death in the Universe (March 2004)


Within the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), a nearby and irregularly shaped galaxy seen in the Southern Hemisphere lies a star-forming region heavily obscured by interstellar dust. NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope has used its infrared eyes to poke through the cosmic veil to reveal a striking nebula where the entire lifecycle of stars is seen in splendid detail. The LMC is a small satellite galaxy gravitationally bound to our own Milky Way. Yet the gravitational effects are tearing the companion to shreds in a long-playing drama of 'intergalactic cannibalism.' These disruptions lead to a recurring cycle of star birth and star death.

Ya Allah!!!!!!!{:2_71:}Cantiknya..
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Post time 14-10-2009 02:12 PM | Show all posts


Dissection of a Galaxy (May 2004)

Sometimes, the best way to understand how something works is to take it apart. The same is true for galaxies like NGC 300, which NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope has divided into its various parts. NGC 300 is a face-on spiral galaxy located 7.5 million light-years away in the southern constellation Sculptor. This false-color image taken by the infrared array camera on Spitzer readily distinguishes the main star component of the galaxy (blue) from its dusty spiral arms (red). The star distribution peaks strongly in the central bulge where older stars congregate, and tapers off along the arms where younger stars reside.
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Post time 14-10-2009 02:13 PM | Show all posts


Stellar Jewels Shine in New Spitzer Image (May 2004)

One of the most prolific birthing grounds in our Milky Way galaxy, a nebula called RCW 49, is exposed in superb detail for the first time in this new image from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. Located 13,700 light-years away in the southern constellation Centaurus, RCW 49 is a dark and dusty stellar nursery that houses more than 2,200 stars. Because many of the stars in RCW 49 are deeply embedded in plumes of dust, they cannot be seen at visible wavelengths. When viewed with Spitzer's infrared eyes, however, RCW 49 becomes transparent. Like cracking open a quartz rock to discover its jewels inside, the nebula's newborn stars have been dramatically exposed.
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Post time 14-10-2009 02:14 PM | Show all posts



A Parallelogram-Shaped Meal (June 2004)

This image taken by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope shows in unprecedented detail the galaxy Centaurus A's last big meal: a spiral galaxy seemingly twisted into a parallelogram-shaped structure of dust. Spitzer's ability to see dust and also see through it allowed the telescope to peer into the center of Centaurus A and capture this galactic remnant as never before. An elliptical galaxy located 10 million light-years from Earth, Centaurus A is one of the brightest sources of radio waves in the sky. These radio waves indicate the presence of a supermassive black hole, which may be "feeding" off the leftover galactic meal.
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Post time 14-10-2009 02:17 PM | Show all posts



Ring of Stellar Death (August 2004)

This false-color image from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope shows a dying star (center) surrounded by a cloud of glowing gas and dust. Thanks to Spitzer's dust-piercing infrared eyes, the new image also highlights a never-before-seen feature -- a giant ring of material (red) slightly offset from the cloud's core. This clumpy ring consists of material that was expelled from the aging star. The star and its cloud halo constitute a "planetary nebula" called NGC 246. When a star like our own Sun begins to run out of fuel, its core shrinks and heats up, boiling off the star's outer layers. Leftover material shoots outward, expanding in shells around the star. This ejected material is then bombarded with ultraviolet light from the central star's fiery surface, producing huge, glowing clouds -- planetary nebulas -- that look like giant jellyfish in space.

Cantikkan..
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Post time 14-10-2009 02:18 PM | Show all posts


Fire Within the Antennae Galaxies (September 2004)

This false-color image from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope reveals hidden populations of newborn stars at the heart of the colliding "Antennae" galaxies. These two galaxies, known individually as NGC 4038 and 4039, are located around 68 million light-years away and have been merging together for about the last 800 million years. The latest Spitzer observations provide a snapshot of the tremendous burst of star formation triggered in the process of this collision, particularly at the site where the two galaxies overlap.
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Post time 14-10-2009 02:18 PM | Show all posts
Cantikknya yang tu..
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Post time 14-10-2009 02:21 PM | Show all posts


Spitzer Digs Up Galactic Fossil (October 2004)

This false-color image taken by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope shows a globular cluster previously hidden in the dusty plane of our Milky Way galaxy. Globular clusters are compact bundles of old stars that date back to the birth of our galaxy, 13 or so billion years ago. Astronomers use these galactic "fossils" as tools for studying the age and formation of the Milky Way. Most clusters orbit around the center of the galaxy well above its dust-enshrouded disc, or plane, while making brief, repeated passes through the plane that each last about a million years. Spitzer, with infrared eyes that can see into the dusty galactic plane, first spotted the newfound cluster during its current pass. A visible-light image (inset) shows only a dark patch of sky. The red streak behind the core of the cluster is a dust cloud, which may indicate the cluster's interaction with the Milky Way. Alternatively, this cloud may lie coincidentally along Spitzer's line of sight.
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Post time 14-10-2009 02:22 PM | Show all posts


`Galactic Ghoul` Rears Its Spooky Head (October 2004)

A "monster" lurking behind a blanket of cosmic dust is unveiled in this new Halloween image from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. Resembling a ghoul with two hollow eyes and a screaming mouth, this masked cloud of newborn stars was uncovered by Spitzer's heat-seeking infrared eyes. The spooky cloud -- a nebula called "DR 6" residing in the plane of our Milky Way galaxy -- is home to a cluster of about 10 massive newborn stars, ranging in size from 10 to 20 times the mass of our Sun. The nebular "eyes" and "mouth" were carved out by intense heat and winds, which shoot outward from the stars (located in the central bar or "nose"). The green material remaining in the eyes and mouth is comprised of gas, while the red regions and tendrils beyond make up the dusty cloud that originally gave birth to the young stars.

Enormous... Ya Allah.......
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Post time 14-10-2009 02:24 PM | Show all posts


First Peek at Spitzer's Legacy: Mysterious Whirlpool Galaxy (November 2004)

NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope has captured these infrared images of the "Whirlpool Galaxy," revealing strange structures bridging the gaps between the dust-rich spiral arms, and tracing the dust, gas and stellar populations in both the bright spiral galaxy and its companion. The Spitzer image is a four-color composite of invisible light, showing emissions from wavelengths of 3.6 microns (blue), 4.5 microns (green), 5.8 microns (orange) and 8.0 microns (red). These wavelengths are roughly 10 times longer than those seen by the human eye.
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