Several portraits of outer space and all existing objects have been immortalized in the form of photos and videos. Some of them even include rare portraits that are only owned by world space agencies, such as NASA. These images are captured using special technologies, such as the Hubble telescope and infrared telescope, which are capable of capturing distant objects in the universe.
So, some of the portraits below illustrate how the conditions in outer space look, including the celestial objects under study. Come on, take a peek at the photos!
1. The process of death of a super star 11 thousand years ago has been caught by NASA technology
stellar death process (doc. NASA)—
2. NASA launched the news that most of the planet Mars is in very cold temperatures. It’s a frozen sandbar on Mars
frozen sand dunes (NASA doc.)—
3. The Coalsack Nebula is the most prominent dark nebula seen from our galaxy, written in Astronomy Now
Nebula Coalsack (NASA)—
4.The edge of the famous Magellan cloud was successfully immortalized by NASA in 2013
Maggelan cloud (doc. NASA)—
5. This astronaut named Alvin Drew is conducting a NASA mission in space in February 2011
6. An Earth-like planet named Kepler-22B is 600 light-years away, recorded in the Space science site
Kepler-22B (NASA doc.)—
7. NASA crew on the ISS captures an image of the Earth from above San Francisco, United States
captured photo from ISS (doc. NASA)—
8. The super star named Canis Majoris has a size of 1,420 times larger than the Sun, quoted in Sci-News
Canis Majoris Star (doc. NASA)—
9. The Hubble Telescope captures quasars crossing a galaxy. The quasar is the core of active galaxies and is influenced by black holes
quasar in the core of the galaxy (doc. NASA)—
10. This is a collection of stars at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy taken from the Spitzer Space Telescope
collection of stars in the Milky Way (doc. NASA)–
Seeing the portraits of outer space and all kinds of objects really amazes us. What do you think? The universe seems to have no limits, right? Hopefully this article can add to your insight, yes!