NGC 2170, Stardust Angel
Hubble’s Crisp New Image of Jupiter and Europa by Hubble Space Telescope / ESA
Jamestown, California by Eric Houck
NGC2237, The Rosette Nebula
Craters on Moon:
1° From crater Theophilus (100km diameter) below to crater Langrenus above.
2° From bottom to top, dark titanium rich lava in the Sea of Fertility then the diamond shaped patch is the Marsh of Sleep. Small bright crater Proclus is thought to be a recent impact crater and has thrown out bright ejecta that is much lighter than the surrounding ancient weathered rock. Above is the rather hexagonal Mare Crisium.
3° From the Sinus Iridium top left through the Mare Imbrium with the Alpine Valley in the centre. (This original image is horizontal)
4° At the middle and bottom of this image, sunlight is shining on a mountain peak in the Alexander crater which lies beyond the day/night terminator.
Image credit: John Purvis
Milky Way Galaxy Mt. Fuji over Lake Kawaguchiko at sunrise in Fujikawaguchiko, Japan
by ณัฐวุฒิ อุตมหาราช
Milky Way at Quairading, Western Australia
Nikon d5500 - 50mm - ISO 4000 - f/2.8 - Foreground: 21 x 20 seconds - Sky: 34 x 30 seconds - iOptron SkyTracker - Hoya Red Intensifier filter
The Dark River to Antares : A dark river seems to flow through this sky from the horizon toward colorful clouds near red giant star Antares. Murky looking, the dark river is a dusty nebula obscuring background starlight near the central Milky Way, although the dark dust nebula contains mostly hydrogen molecular gas. Dust scattering starlight around Antares, alpha star of Scorpius, creates the unusual yellow-hued reflection nebula. Above it, bright blue double star Rho Ophiuchi is embedded in more typical dusty bluish reflection nebulae, with red emission nebulae also scattered through the interstellar space. Globular star cluster M4 looks almost like a bright star just above and right of Antares, though it lies far behind the colorful clouds, at a distance of some 7,000 light-years. The dark river itself is about 500 light years away. To create the startling night sky view, all background and foreground exposures were made back to back with the same camera and telephoto lens on the same night from the same location. In combination they produce a stunning image that reveals a range of brightness and color that your eye can’t quite perceive. Recorded in the early hours of January 31, the composite also captures Mars still near the eastern horizon and rising to join rival Antares on the celestial stage. Bright Mars and its watery reflection are left of a lonely tree in the Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge, New Mexico, planet Earth. via NASA
The Moon... revealing its scars, its colours, its history, its strength, its hypnotic beauty, its pride, its majesty... Taken from my backyard, South of France.
Dive into the cosmos with the beautiful and ethereal voice of Lisa Gerrard! This song called Elegy is from her solo album Immortal Memory.