NASA Telescopes Discover Record-Breaking Black Hole (unlabeled) by James Webb Space Telescope
Moon (Nov. 3, 2021)
The Boogeyman Nebula, LDN 1622 // dnnsrttn
Cygnus Wall of North America Nebula © Aleix Roig
NGC 6357, Celestial Cathedral
ESO 350-40, Cartwheel Galaxy
The Exotic Stellar Population of Westerlund 1 (NIRCam) by NASA's James Webb Space Telescope
Hubble Spotlights a Swirling Spiral by NASA Hubble
Interacting Galaxies Arp 194 by Hubble Heritage
Two spiral galaxies, NGC 6040 and NGC 6039, are merging together at the right side of this Hubble image. NGC 6039 is seen face-on and is circular in shape. NGC 6040 seems to lie in front of the first one. In the lower-left corner, cut off by the frame, the elliptical galaxy NGC 6041 — a central member of the galaxy cluster that Arp 122 resides in — appears as light radiating from a point. The color image was made from separate exposures taken in the visible and infrared regions
Strike a pose, vogue! 📸
The galaxy on the left looks like it went with extreme eye makeup, while the one on the right went with a more natural look. Together, they’re known as Arp 107, a pair of colliding galaxies.
The glamorous galaxy on the left is an extremely energetic galaxy with a very active core. Its small companion is connected to it by a faint “bridge” of gas and dust. This view was captured by the Hubble Space Telescope.
Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, J. Dalcanton.
ALT TEXT: A pair of merging galaxies. The galaxy on the left has a single, large spiral arm curving out from the core toward 3 o’clock and wrapping counterclockwise, ending in a straighter line pointing toward the bottom of the frame. This arm is bright blue with shades of brown mixed in. The right-hand galaxy has a bright core that is approximately the same size as the galaxy at left, but only a tiny bit of very faint material surrounds it. A broad curtain of gas connects the two galaxies’ cores and hangs beneath them. Small stars and galaxies are scattered throughout the black background of space.