Galaxy M51 is undergoing a phase of rapid star formation, triggered by interaction with its cosmic neighbour. Blue hues indicate regions with young, hot stars, whilst yellow hues represent old stellar populations. This #astrophotography was taken with my Celestron Origin in >8 hours of exposure .
Posts by Matthias Rauls
Why not build a pipeline for export into Asia to Oman?
Hmhh, according to this UK government website, 40% of UK's jet fuel is coming from Kuwait. assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/68dbe4...
If I got the math right, 3,85$/gallon is less than 40% of the typical European price level. But still, the driving force for going electric is rather low here. What else has to happen?
Was soll dieser Fiebertraum einer AI denn bitte visualisieren? 🙈
Gibt es bessere Abbildungen? Oder: gibt es überhaupt einem menschlichen Gehirn vermittelbare Ideen, wie es hinter dem Ereignishorizont weitergeht?
What an enviable experience!
What is the reason, btw, that we don't here more often from early results e.g. number of supernovae detected etc. Is it because the "results" only would come from "the other end" of the alert pipeline?
Thanks - but my brain starts spinning ... (or is it expanding?)
Wouldn't the "galaxies move through space" argument quickly 'collide' with the speed limits of relativity?
This maps neglects the long history of making excellent wines in many European regions before 1960, German Riesling being only one among many.
This illustration is not appropriate. No question about it. Without wishing to defend the authors, I could imagine that the extremely rapid rotation of the asteroid gave rise to the idea of it having a more solid structure and less being of the rubble heap type.
This image shows the location of Cloud-9, which is 14 million light-years from Earth. The diffuse magenta is radio data from the ground-based Very Large Array (VLA) showing the presence of the cloud. The dashed circle marks the peak of radio emission,which is where researchers focused their search for stars. Follow-up observations by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope’s Advanced Camera for Surveys found no stars within the cloud. The few objects that appear within its boundaries are background galaxies. Before the Hubble observations, scientists could argue that Cloud-9 is a faint dwarf galaxy whose stars could not be seen with ground-based telescopes due to the lack of sensitivity. Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys shows that, in reality, the failed galaxy contains no stars.
The universe is still full of surprises! This is Cloud-9, a starless blob held together by dark matter--a "failed galaxy."
Astronomers have long speculated that such hidden objects formed the building blocks of bright galaxies like our own. Now we've found one. 🧪🔭
esahubble.org/news/heic2601/
Lovely!
I enjoyed reading your summary on the physics of skating. I remembered, however, that 40y ago I was told in Chemical Physics, that transient pressure on ice can not suffice to melt it. May I bring to your attention this recent MD study on an interesting alternative? journals.aps.org/prl/abstract...
Thanks!
A yellowish shining spiral galaxy with dark brownish dust bands and blueish groups of young hot stars.
M31 is our neighbor in the ocean of the universe. I recently showed that my telescope can detect individual stars 2.5Mio LY away. Imaging the entire galaxy with the same telescope is more difficult. This #astrophotography with my #CelestonOrigin is a mosaic from 6 images, each 1h of exposure time.
What a beautiful, instructive visualization (and it is still even if people dispute the one or the other color shade by 10.000y).
Is there a higher resolution version of this map available?
There seems to be a bad link attached!? But gorgeous image!!
Great visualization!
Have you yet seen two lava fountains close to each other? Check this live cam from Kilauea:
www.youtube.com/live/BqmpkUd...
Today, that star marked with "Var!" can be imaged with a 6 inch telescope: bsky.app/profile/dobs...
But the point you are making is interesting, though!
I am sure that you are using the word lie as a rethoric hyperbole here. To me, it's just our eyes (and monitors) that are incapable of displaying and recognizing exponential brightness profiles.
A black and white photo of Albert Einstein, around age 25, sitting at a desk. He is a wearing a flannel suit and resting his right arm on the desk. Einstein is looking to the left of the photographer in this posed photo.
The first paragraph of the paper, in German. Translated to English is reads: It is known that Maxwell's electrodynamics—as usually understood at the present time—when applied to moving bodies, leads to asymmetries which do not appear to be inherent in the phenomena. Take, for example, the reciprocal electrodynamic action of a magnet and a conductor. The observable phenomenon here depends only on the relative motion of the conductor and the magnet, whereas the customary view draws a sharp distinction between the two cases in which either the one or the other of these bodies is in motion. For if the magnet is in motion and the conductor at rest, there arises in the neighbourhood of the magnet an electric field with a certain definite energy, producing a current at the places where parts of the conductor are situated. But if the magnet is stationary and the conductor in motion, no electric field arises in the neighbourhood of the magnet...
Happy 120th birthday, special relativity!
Albert Einstein introduced special relativity in the paper "On The Electrodynamics Of Moving Bodies," published in Annalen der Physik #OTD in 1905. 🧪 ⚛️ 🔭
Manuscript: onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1...
English: www.fourmilab.ch/etexts/einst...
Interesting! The word "kwaksalver" also is equivalent to the old German word for the element mercury, whick is "Quecksilber". So this could be someone who prepares mercury containing ointments which must have been quite common then.
Blue-white wisps of a galactic nebula against the backdrop of countless stars in the summer Milky Way.
A close-up of the blue-white wisps of the Eastern Veil nebula against the backdrop of countless stars in the summer Milky Way.
Constellation Cygnus hides a marvel of galactic nebulae. The Eastern Veil Nebula is part of a much larger remnant of a supernova that exploded around 8,000 years ago. This #astrophotography was created as a mosaic of two images taken with my #CelestronOrigin, each with an exposure time of one hour.
That person in the '70s is exactly me!
The yellowish tone of old stars in the center of the Andromeda galaxy contrasts with the blue from groups of hot young stars, dark dust lanes and a few small magenta blobs from ionized hydrogen clouds. The image was exposed for around 2 hours with a 6 inch Celestron Origin telescope.
In the midst of a featureless star cloud in the Andromeda galaxy, a single star is highlghted. This variable "Cepheid" star was discovered in 1923 by Edwin Hubble on photographic plates with the 2.5m Hooker telescope on Mt. Wilson. Today, a 6 inch Celestron Origin Intelligent Home observatory can image that star quite easily.
"The star that changed the size of the universe" was discovered in 1923 by Hubble on a plate taken with the 2.5m Hooker telescope. This variable Cepheid star proved that Andromeda is a far away galaxy like our own. Today, #astrophotography with my little #CelestronOrigin can show this star clearly.
Congratulations on that phantastic journey!