The largest Astronomical image to date
The largest astronomical image to date is the picture of the Milky Way contains 46 billion pixels. Take a look at the amazing details…
The largest astronomical image to date is the picture of the Milky Way contains 46 billion pixels. Take a look at the amazing details…
Photographer Yuri Beletsky captured an exceptionally intense, glorious Milky Way with reddish airglow flooded this Chilean winter night skyscape, just after sunset on September 1. Image
“Edge of Stability” highlights some of the most unique, awe-inspiring, and incredibly strange sights on the planet. A result of over 70,000 individual high resolution photos and
The Milky Way rises over the Temple of Poseidon, a timelapse version of June’s 8, ‘the Milky Way over the majestic Temple of Poseidon,’ by Alexandros Maragos.
In this impressive image with the Milky Way in the background, the glowing lights are emanate from the Temple of Poseidon at Cape Sounion, 65km southeast of
ESA unveils this new image based on data from the Planck satellite, show formation of stars, that looks like Van Gogh’s masterpiece, The Starry Night.
A virtual telescope as big as planet Earth, will take detailed images of the very edge, or “event horizon,” of the supermassive black hole at the center
A new study claims that the Milky Way is home to billions of planets positioned at the ‘habitable zone.’
Meet our new neighbours: Astronomers discovered at least nine ultra-faint satellites in the vicinity of the Magellanic Clouds. New dwarf galaxies orbiting around the Milky Way.
The magnificent central disk of our Milky Way Galaxy arches over the aged Toadstool hoodoos rock formations in northern Arizona, USA. Image credit David Lane & R.