SPACE
THE HEAVEN OF PHYSICS
February 02, 2024
Photo Credits: Instagram/nasa
The NASA often takes to Instagram to share stunning visuals of the cosmos and celestial bodies from space, captured by its telescope.
Photo Credits: Instagram/nasa
Let's take a look at some of the stunning starry photos captured by NASA.
Photo Credits: Instagram/nasa
NASA's Webb telescope captured this record- breaking brown dwarf in star cluster IC 348. It is about 1000 light-years away and only 5 million years old.
Photo Credits: Instagram/nasa
NASA's Hubble telescope captured this image of a cosmic reef 163,000 light-years from Earth in the constellation Dorado. It is part of a satellite galaxy of the Milky Way full of massive stars.
Photo Credits: Instagram/nasa
Captured by the Hubble telescope, here's pic of two galaxies full of bright blue stars and dark brown dust gravitationally interacting andd merging.
Photo Credits: Instagram/nasa
This image was captured by Hubble telescope when a star got too close to a black hole causing the tidal waves to rip away the stars' gaseous matter.
Photo Credits: Instagram/nasa
NASA's Hubble telescope captured this image of nearly 10,000 galaxies of all shapes, sizes and ages in the universe.
Photo Credits: Instagram/nasa
NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory captured this image of a fireworks-like nova called GK Persel. The image captured the outburst of mass caused by a thermonuclear explosion on the surface of a white dwarf star.
Photo Credits: Instagram/nasa
This image shows a glittering star 10 times massive than the Sun. It is located 6,500 light years away from the Earth.
Photo Credits: Instagram/nasa
NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory also captured the 'Christmas Tree Cluster' of young stars about 2,500 light-years from Earth. The image shows a nebula of green gas surrounding the stars.
Photo Credits: Instagram/nasa
Here's an image of remnants of a massive stellar explosion captured by the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX). This explosion took place 1500 light years away in the constellation Cygnus.
Photo Credits: Instagram/nasa
NASA shared this image of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) and N11, the secon-largest star-forming region within the LMC.
Photo Credits: Instagram/nasa
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