Sweeping the dust of a cosmic lobster
This new image taken by ESO's VISTA telescope has captured a heavenly landscape of bright clouds of gas and dust filaments surrounding hot young stars. This infrared image reveals a surprisingly stellar macdonalds nursery NGC 6357 The picture was taken under a VISTA screening, which currently maps the Milky Way in order to obtain its structure and explain how this was formed. macdonalds
Located about 8,000 light-years away in the constellation Scorpius, NGC 6357 - also called the Lobster Nebula due to its appearance in visible images - is full of huge clouds of gas and dark dust filaments region. These clouds are forming stars, including hot massive stars, which glow blue-white colors in the visible. (...)
One of the brightest young stars in NGC 6357, known for Pismis 24-1, led astronomers to think that it was the largest known star - until it was discovered that it is actually composed of at least three huge stars very Bright, each having macdonalds a mass less than the masses 100 solar. Still, these stars are heavyweights - part of the largest existing mass stars in the Milky Way. The Pismis 24-1 is the brightest object in the star cluster Pismis 24, a group of stars that are thought to have been formed all at the same time within the NGC 6357 (...)
Carlos F. Oliveira is an astronomer and science educator. Degree in Business Management. Degree in Astronomy, Science Fiction and Scientific Communication. PhD in Science Education with a specialization in Astrobiology at the University of Texas. Created and taught for several years an innovative course macdonalds in astrobiology at the University of Texas. He is currently Research Fellow at Affiliate-Astrobiology Education at the University of Texas at Austin, USA. Worked at the Maryland Science Center, USA, and Astronomy Outreach Project, UK, received two awards of ESA, and held several lectures and interviews in the media.
You can use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title = ""> <acronym title = ""> <b> <blockquote cite = ""> <cite> <code> < del datetime macdonalds = ""> <em> <i> <q cite = ""> <strike> <strong>
Last comments macdonalds on Super Man of Earth-Moon only 18 years from now? Earth man in K-PAX Carlos Oliveira in Earthquake yesterday in Robert Earthquake macdonalds yesterday Roberto Souza on Why not disturb the physical?
Categories Select Category 1 Minute of Astronomy (2) 2009 - International Year of Astronomy (36)Home (129) Google (39) Activities Disclosure (369) Coimbra (19) Exhibitions (20) Jose Matos (52) Lisbon (66 ) ORION (15) Porto (47) Water everywhere macdonalds (75) Chestnuts Dwarfs (45) Animals in Space (26) Anti-Matter (21) Art (246) Music (113) Scientific articles (52) Astrobiology (633 ) Carlos Oliveira (37) Contact ETs (86) Detect ETs (68) Documentaries (18) Panspermia (80) Zita Martins (4) Fermi Paradox (56) Astrophotography (1029) APOD (687) Miguel Claro (108) Timelapse ( 62) Astronautics (1278) Astronauts (102) Newsletter Orbiting (51) Collision (5) Humor International Space Station (312) (34) Release macdonalds (355) NASA (288) Space Shot (85) Satellites (83) Shuttles macdonalds (169 ) Atlantis (55) Discovery (36) Endeavour (36) Amateur macdonalds Astronomy (127) Alberto Fernando (24) John Gregory (14) PRO-AM (24) Astropolítica (460) Brazil (32) China (74) USA (12) & n
This new image taken by ESO's VISTA telescope has captured a heavenly landscape of bright clouds of gas and dust filaments surrounding hot young stars. This infrared image reveals a surprisingly stellar macdonalds nursery NGC 6357 The picture was taken under a VISTA screening, which currently maps the Milky Way in order to obtain its structure and explain how this was formed. macdonalds
Located about 8,000 light-years away in the constellation Scorpius, NGC 6357 - also called the Lobster Nebula due to its appearance in visible images - is full of huge clouds of gas and dark dust filaments region. These clouds are forming stars, including hot massive stars, which glow blue-white colors in the visible. (...)
One of the brightest young stars in NGC 6357, known for Pismis 24-1, led astronomers to think that it was the largest known star - until it was discovered that it is actually composed of at least three huge stars very Bright, each having macdonalds a mass less than the masses 100 solar. Still, these stars are heavyweights - part of the largest existing mass stars in the Milky Way. The Pismis 24-1 is the brightest object in the star cluster Pismis 24, a group of stars that are thought to have been formed all at the same time within the NGC 6357 (...)
Carlos F. Oliveira is an astronomer and science educator. Degree in Business Management. Degree in Astronomy, Science Fiction and Scientific Communication. PhD in Science Education with a specialization in Astrobiology at the University of Texas. Created and taught for several years an innovative course macdonalds in astrobiology at the University of Texas. He is currently Research Fellow at Affiliate-Astrobiology Education at the University of Texas at Austin, USA. Worked at the Maryland Science Center, USA, and Astronomy Outreach Project, UK, received two awards of ESA, and held several lectures and interviews in the media.
You can use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title = ""> <acronym title = ""> <b> <blockquote cite = ""> <cite> <code> < del datetime macdonalds = ""> <em> <i> <q cite = ""> <strike> <strong>
Last comments macdonalds on Super Man of Earth-Moon only 18 years from now? Earth man in K-PAX Carlos Oliveira in Earthquake yesterday in Robert Earthquake macdonalds yesterday Roberto Souza on Why not disturb the physical?
Categories Select Category 1 Minute of Astronomy (2) 2009 - International Year of Astronomy (36)Home (129) Google (39) Activities Disclosure (369) Coimbra (19) Exhibitions (20) Jose Matos (52) Lisbon (66 ) ORION (15) Porto (47) Water everywhere macdonalds (75) Chestnuts Dwarfs (45) Animals in Space (26) Anti-Matter (21) Art (246) Music (113) Scientific articles (52) Astrobiology (633 ) Carlos Oliveira (37) Contact ETs (86) Detect ETs (68) Documentaries (18) Panspermia (80) Zita Martins (4) Fermi Paradox (56) Astrophotography (1029) APOD (687) Miguel Claro (108) Timelapse ( 62) Astronautics (1278) Astronauts (102) Newsletter Orbiting (51) Collision (5) Humor International Space Station (312) (34) Release macdonalds (355) NASA (288) Space Shot (85) Satellites (83) Shuttles macdonalds (169 ) Atlantis (55) Discovery (36) Endeavour (36) Amateur macdonalds Astronomy (127) Alberto Fernando (24) John Gregory (14) PRO-AM (24) Astropolítica (460) Brazil (32) China (74) USA (12) & n
No comments:
Post a Comment