Hubble Classic: Stars, Galaxies and Nebulae
Yes, you are seeing double! A James Webb Space Telescope infrared image is at top left and visible light image from Hubble at bottom right. The resolution is the same—but each show off the gas, dust, and stars in various detail. Explainer: https://webbtelescope.pub/3WCQFSx
#fine ass
Cosmic Jellyfish: Interacting Galaxies UGC 9326/7 ©
NASA’s new images of Uranus captured by James Webb Space Telescope (2024)
No mask, no veins, no blood … In this new, crisp image from the James Webb Space Telescope and Hubble, the smaller galaxy at left “slithered” behind the larger galaxy. The combo of mid-infrared, visible, and ultraviolet light allows us to see the galaxies in ghastly detail: https://webbtelescope.pub/48wDgQc
Cutaway diagram of the Apollo spacecraft, S-IVB, S-II, S-IC, J-2 and F-1 engine of the Saturn V.
Date: 1967
NASA ID: 0100985, 0101138, 0101139, 0101140, 0100983, 9801810, 9801770, 0100981, 9801771
Distance: 7500 light years.
Credit: ESO/T. Preibisch.
The Perseids 2023 over Stonehenge
Stardust From Comet Halley Falls To Earth
Pleiades Star Cluster