I found this NASA site a while ago, but completely forgot about it until now. I hope you find it interesting.
Hubble explores the universe 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. That means it has observed some fascinating cosmic wonder every day of the year, including on your birthday.
I got the very pretty caterpillar Protostar IRAS 20324+4057
I will look at all of yours, because they’re all like beautiful fireworks.
brokenman82 on
Galaxy Cluster Abell 2744
Located 3.5 billion light-years away, Abell 2744 contains several hundred galaxies and might be a pile-up of at least four smaller galaxy clusters. Abell 2744’s strong gravitational field acts as a lens, brightening and magnifying the light of nearly 3,000 distant background galaxies.
TheRealLiviux on
Nothing, because it didn’t exist yet.
tobias_the_letdown on
V838 Monocerotis Light Echo
This image captures a light echo from the star V838 Monocerotis. After the star brightened temporarily, light from that eruption began propagating outward through a dusty cloud around the star. The light reflects or „echoes“ off the dust and then travels to Earth.
StarchyStarky on
Hubble deep field! (December 19th)
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It won’t let me add the text body, sorry:
I found this NASA site a while ago, but completely forgot about it until now. I hope you find it interesting.
Hubble explores the universe 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. That means it has observed some fascinating cosmic wonder every day of the year, including on your birthday.
I got the very pretty caterpillar Protostar IRAS 20324+4057
I will look at all of yours, because they’re all like beautiful fireworks.
Galaxy Cluster Abell 2744
Located 3.5 billion light-years away, Abell 2744 contains several hundred galaxies and might be a pile-up of at least four smaller galaxy clusters. Abell 2744’s strong gravitational field acts as a lens, brightening and magnifying the light of nearly 3,000 distant background galaxies.
Nothing, because it didn’t exist yet.
V838 Monocerotis Light Echo
This image captures a light echo from the star V838 Monocerotis. After the star brightened temporarily, light from that eruption began propagating outward through a dusty cloud around the star. The light reflects or „echoes“ off the dust and then travels to Earth.
Hubble deep field! (December 19th)