Explore over 100 million stars
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The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has captured the sharpest and biggest image ever taken of the Andromeda galaxy — otherwise known as Messier 31. The enormous image is the biggest Hubble image ever released and shows over 100 million stars and thousands of star clusters embedded in a section of the galaxy’s pancake-shaped disc stretching across over 40 000 light-years.
This sweeping view shows one third of our galactic neighbour, the Andromeda Galaxy, with stunning clarity. The panoramic image has a staggering 1.5 billion pixels — meaning you would need more than 600 HD television screens to display the whole image. It traces the galaxy from its central galactic bulge on the left, where stars are densely packed together, across lanes of stars and dust to the sparser outskirts of its outer disc on the right.
The large groups of blue stars in the galaxy indicate the locations of star clusters and star-forming regions in the spiral arms, whilst the dark silhouettes of obscured regions trace out complex dust structures. Underlying the entire galaxy is a smooth distribution of cooler red stars that trace Andromeda's evolution over billions of years.
The Andromeda Galaxy is a large spiral galaxy — a galaxy type home to the majority of the stars in the Universe — and this detailed view, which captures over 100 million stars, represents a new benchmark for precision studies of this galaxy type. The clarity of these observations will help astronomers to interpret the light from the many galaxies that have a similar structure but lie much further away.
Because the Andromeda Galaxy is only 2.5 million light-years from Earth it is a much bigger target on the sky than the galaxies Hubble routinely photographs that are billions of light-years away. In fact its full diameter on the night sky is six times that of the full Moon. To capture the large portion of the galaxy seen here — over 40 000 light-years across — Hubble took 411 images which have been assembled into a mosaic image.
This panorama is the product of the Panchromatic Hubble Andromeda Treasury
(PHAT) programme. Images were obtained from viewing the galaxy in near-ultraviolet, visible, and near-infrared wavelengths, using the Advanced Camera for Surveys aboard Hubble. This view shows the galaxy in its natural visible-light colour as photographed in red and blue filters.
Image Credit: NASA/ESA
Explanation from: https://www.spacetelescope.org/news/heic1502/
Wow!!!!!
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing these images, I love them, check your site out daily and receive emails and so on. Beautiful! Job very well done!
ReplyDeletethat was amazeing brilliant .
ReplyDeletelove the clarity and an easy speak how this article was written and the fantastic images, with all those monitors and those millions of pixels one would have to be on the moon to watch it. seriously when is that pile of junk going to be retired, clarity's crap, you still have to hypothesise.
ReplyDeleteAndromeda Galaxy!!!!
ReplyDeleteThe Great Andromeda Galaxy, partner to my home Milky way Galaxy. Lovely to read and share views about.
ReplyDeletevery intrasting\ அறிவுக்கூர்மை
ReplyDeleteSo much I love seeing Andromeda Galaxy, very much I like reading all about this very interesting object in Space. My profound regards to Google and other contributing factors to the Project.
ReplyDeletehow can you download the full quality image
ReplyDeletehttp://earthspacecircle.blogspot.com.au/2016/07/earth-and-moon-seen-by-dscovr.html
ReplyDelete