Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by Universe

Post image

Cygnus is like the fire of space, another amazing part of the Milky Way

1 year ago 166 26 1 2
For centuries, comets have captured our imagination. Across history they have been the harbingers of doom, inspired artists and fascinated astronomers. These icy remnants of the formation of the Solar System hold secrets to help us understand the events nearly 5 billion years ago. But before these secrets can be revealed, comets have to be studied and to study them they need to be found. A team of researchers have developed a technique to hunt down comets based upon data from meteor showers and to assess if they pose any threat to us here on Earth!

For centuries, comets have captured our imagination. Across history they have been the harbingers of doom, inspired artists and fascinated astronomers. These icy remnants of the formation of the Solar System hold secrets to help us understand the events nearly 5 billion years ago. But before these secrets can be revealed, comets have to be studied and to study them they need to be found. A team of researchers have developed a technique to hunt down comets based upon data from meteor showers and to assess if they pose any threat to us here on Earth!

Meteor Showers May One Day Help Protect Humanity!

A long-period comet called 2001 RX14 (Linear) turned up in images captured in 2002 by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey telescope in New Mexico.

1 year ago 94 13 0 2
Lapland,Finland

Lapland,Finland

Wish you all happy new year 🥳🎆.

1 year ago 247 33 5 3
Post image

The Hourglass Nebula seen by Hubble

1 year ago 142 18 4 2
Post image

Stargazing

1 year ago 126 8 1 1
Post image

Aurora over Monument Valley, Arizona 🇺🇸

1 year ago 337 53 7 2
Post image
1 year ago 13358 937 199 79
Post image
1 year ago 14076 666 116 35
Advertisement
Post image

when the sky comes alive ✨

1 year ago 18398 1143 132 44
Post image

Aspen, Colorado ❄️

1 year ago 19706 878 269 70
Post image

Magnificent View of the Milky Way Galaxy!

1 year ago 168 20 0 1
Post image

Lady Aurora paiting the sky with magic! 💜

1 year ago 309 41 8 2
Post image

M27: The Dumbbell Nebula

1 year ago 87 8 2 1
Post image

Beautiful 😍 view of Milky-way.
📸 :-@imhoff.imagery

1 year ago 165 18 0 1
Post image
1 year ago 52 9 1 0
Post image

Those who are not shocked when they first come across quantum theory cannot possibly have understood it. ~ Niels Bohr

1 year ago 144 25 6 1
Post image

The real size of things ~ A Thread🧵

1. If Saturn were as close to Earth as the Moon, this is what it would look like:

1 year ago 176 21 9 1
Advertisement
Post image

Amazing «mother of pearl» clouds over Oslo this morning 😍. Also known as polar stratospheric clouds.
📸lailahammeren and bergensiana

1 year ago 144 16 2 1
Post image
1 year ago 194 25 3 1
Post image

Clearest image of Uranus ever taken.|NASA|

1 year ago 240 29 13 5
Post image

Andromeda Galaxy

1 year ago 162 10 1 2
Post image

ALASKA USA

1 year ago 200 21 1 1
Post image

One-in-a-million shot... photographing Pyramids and accidently capturing two meteors entering Earth at the same time...

1 year ago 387 62 9 6
The universe’s largest water reservoir, 140 trillion times the water in Earth's oceans, found near a supermassive black hole:

Astronomers have discovered an enormous reservoir of water vapor near the quasar APM 08279+5255, located over 12 billion light-years away.

 This cosmic water supply contains 140 trillion times the water found in Earth’s oceans and surrounds a supermassive black hole 20 billion times the mass of our Sun. The quasar, which radiates energy equivalent to a thousand trillion suns, offers a glimpse into the conditions of the early universe.

The discovery highlights the presence of water vapor billions of years ago, suggesting that life’s building blocks have existed for much of the universe’s history. 

The region around the quasar is far denser and warmer than typical galactic environments, providing key insights into how galaxies, black holes, and stars formed and evolved. 

This breakthrough was achieved using advanced telescopes in Hawaii, California, and France, offering an extraordinary window into the cosmos’ earliest chapters.

The universe’s largest water reservoir, 140 trillion times the water in Earth's oceans, found near a supermassive black hole: Astronomers have discovered an enormous reservoir of water vapor near the quasar APM 08279+5255, located over 12 billion light-years away. This cosmic water supply contains 140 trillion times the water found in Earth’s oceans and surrounds a supermassive black hole 20 billion times the mass of our Sun. The quasar, which radiates energy equivalent to a thousand trillion suns, offers a glimpse into the conditions of the early universe. The discovery highlights the presence of water vapor billions of years ago, suggesting that life’s building blocks have existed for much of the universe’s history. The region around the quasar is far denser and warmer than typical galactic environments, providing key insights into how galaxies, black holes, and stars formed and evolved. This breakthrough was achieved using advanced telescopes in Hawaii, California, and France, offering an extraordinary window into the cosmos’ earliest chapters.

The universe’s largest water reservoir, 140 trillion times the water in Earth's oceans, found near a supermassive black hole.

1 year ago 97 10 7 0
Post image
1 year ago 181 12 1 0
Post image

The Christmas Tree in Space

1 year ago 192 22 3 3
Advertisement
Post image

Perseids (by Petr Horálek Photography) 😍

1 year ago 140 11 1 1
Post image

The Pluto system with moons Charon Nix and Hydra.
Credit: NASA, Damian Peach

1 year ago 105 13 5 1
Post image
1 year ago 174 16 0 2
Post image

This is what we will see in 4 billion years

1 year ago 146 9 8 1