What's new

Amazing Cosmic Images

Mars captured by NASA's Curiosity Rover
1694714171649.png

Uranus captured by the James Webb Space Telescope on Feb. 6, 2023
1694714306625.png

The clearest photo of Mercury, the closest planet to the Sun | NASA
1694714342163.png

The galaxy NGC 4449 is experiencing a "starburst" – a very intense period of star formation. This was likely caused by NGC 4449 interacting or merging with a smaller galaxy.
1694714476400.png
 
image of the butterfly nebula
1694769143258.png

Seen in this Webb image is a newborn star with supersonic jets of gas spewing from its poles. It’s only a few tens of thousands of years old here, but when it grows up, it'll be much like our Sun:
1694769358334.png

ESA/Hubble Picture of the Week features this dream-like galaxy known as NGC 3156
1694769451083.png
 
Great news my friend, soon mankind will colonize these exoplanets in the future. Keep it up and share more info.

NASA's $10 billion space telescope just discovered methane and carbon dioxide on a possible water covered 'Super Earth'
1694887675891.png

There has to be life on one of these dots.
1694887721187.png
 
The Moon dressed as Saturn!
1694888131558.png

NGC 3156 is an "in-between" galaxy.

As a lenticular galaxy, it has properties of both spiral and elliptical galaxies. It's home to mostly older stars and has a central bulge of stars, but lacks spiral arms.
1694888221018.png

Pluto's moon, Charon, at highest resolution so far captured by NASA
1694888283944.png
 
Great news my friend, soon mankind will colonize these exoplanets in the future. Keep it up and share more info.
Unfortunately that will NEVER happen.
The iron laws of physics WILL NEVER allow us to bridge the incredible distances involved. Journeys would be tens of thousands of years long at the fastest speed possible , the speed of light. An unbreakable speed limit.
We are just beginning to "see" these exoplanets as our instruments get better and better. We will eventually see millions of exoplanets and many will be ideal for our carbon based lifeforms but they will always be beyond our reach.
 
Unfortunately that will NEVER happen.
The iron laws of physics WILL NEVER allow us to bridge the incredible distances involved. Journeys would be tens of thousands of years long at the fastest speed possible , the speed of light. An unbreakable speed limit.
We are just beginning to "see" these exoplanets as our instruments get better and better. We will eventually see millions of exoplanets and many will be ideal for our carbon based lifeforms but they will always be beyond our reach.
Agree, nevertheless who knows mankind will come up with a mechanism to travel even by one-tenth the speed of light in the upcoming centuries. Our insatiable appetite to find new ways to travel and colonize will keep us restless until we come up with a tangible solution.
Within a century I do see mankind colonizing the solar system to begin with. I will open a thread one day showing the daily progress of NASA,ESA, SpaceX, and BLUE ORIGINS etc in space explorations.
 
NASA's Juno mission captures stunning view of Jupiter with its volcanic moon, Io
1694974331284.png

Neptune's moon Triton
1694974378637.png

OSIRIS final preparations for Sept. 24 asteroid-sample return
1694974618736.png
 
No.. no.. no.. no.. you cannot use it as a map - it wont look like that at all - because light itself takes time to travel - so any view from any point in space to any other point, is a view into the past and does not reflect where things are right now .... if you for example managed to get to Alpha Centauri at the speed of light and then if you turned around to look back towards our solar system - you would see our solar system as it looked when you left if you have something sensitive enough to capture the light from earth. However, the earth in reality will have moved its normal distance in 4.367 years, so you would be hundreds of millions of miles out if you tried to hop back to that same point you can see. You have to "calculate the new position of earth from what you can see by adjusting it for ( 4.367 years x 2 ) years of drift if you want to travel back, at the speed of light to earth" . This means the above map will only serve as toilet paper on your journey ...

Has geting serviced by Maryam for your services, rotted your brain ?!?! I would be very worried ... everyone here told you to lay off chewing at her "Bikini burger"(!)

on this note i will stop - i can explain more - but dinner is being served ;)
Should have realised by now that he is a cut and paste king only, the only time he types anything original and clearly his lack of intelligence and understanding of basic concepts shows through..
 
NASA's James Webb Space Telescope just detected carbon dioxide on the surface of Jupiter's icy moon Europa. Europa is considered as a good candidate for the possible existence of life.
1695379393681.png

The Pluto system with moons Charon Nix and Hydra.
1695379537945.png

NASA's Galileo spacecraft caught Jupiter's moon Io undergoing a volcanic eruption
1695379594453.png
 
NASA just released haunting new moon images revealing enormous crater deeper than the Grand Canyon near the lunar south pole
1695496374281.png

Lowlands in Mercury's North colorized by the topographic height of the surface.
1695496715175.png
 
Just a small portion of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field image. Every point of light is an entire galaxy, ranging in age, size, shape and color.
1695547152316.png

A peculiar pair!
This image shows Arp 107, which is a pair of galaxies in the midst of a collision about 465 million light-years away. A faint "bridge" of dust and gas connects the two.
1695547250542.png

1695547525722.png

When a Solar Storm hits Tromsø, Norway
1695547686247.png
 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom