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[Closed] Amazing astronomy photographs

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[#2527246]

Stumbled across this website today (thanks to johnclimber).

http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/archivepix.html

Basically 15 years worth of daily photos of the incredible beauty of the universe. How about Orion?

[img] [/img]

Or Saturn's sponge-like moon, Hyperion?

[img] [/img]

Maybe the evocatively-named Pillars of Creation

[img] [/img]

Who needs religion?


 
Posted : 03/03/2011 9:51 pm
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http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/


 
Posted : 03/03/2011 11:18 pm
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Who needs religion?

We need proper aliens ...

๐Ÿ™„


 
Posted : 03/03/2011 11:21 pm
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GFs dad works for NASA, he sends me links APOD links regularly. This is my favourite

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 03/03/2011 11:24 pm
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"Who needs religion?" - not God!

Photos are amazing! Chance is a fine thing!! ๐Ÿ™‚


 
Posted : 03/03/2011 11:34 pm
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[img] [/img]

my fave


 
Posted : 03/03/2011 11:57 pm
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What have NASA redacted from the Pillars of Creation image? Aliens? God?


 
Posted : 04/03/2011 10:22 am
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Dust and gas mostly, I expect.


 
Posted : 04/03/2011 10:25 am
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If any of you have Android phones there's an App that sets these pics as your background each day.

Probably my fave app ๐Ÿ™‚

https://market.android.com/details?id=com.blork.anpod&feature=search_result


 
Posted : 04/03/2011 11:02 am
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[url= http://www.theonion.com/articles/nasa-completes-52year-mission-to-find-kill-god,19263/ ]NASA solves religion question[/url].

So now that that's out of the way, can we please just enjoy the photos?


 
Posted : 04/03/2011 11:16 am
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Not wishing to put a dampener on this thread, and I may have got it wrong, but aren't most of those star cloud type pictures taken with radio telescopes and then coloured in by computer ?
Still impressive stuff though.


 
Posted : 04/03/2011 11:24 am
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The image of the space station passing infront of the sun during an eclipse Is one of my faves.


 
Posted : 04/03/2011 11:41 am
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Never mind all that fancy stuff, an amateur captured this picture of the shuttle docking with the ESS from his garden with a DSLR and an old telescope. Ace!

[url= http://www.metro.co.uk/news/857051-discovery-docking-with-space-station-snapped-by-man-sitting-in-his-garden ]From metro.co.uk[/url]

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 04/03/2011 11:56 am
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Spotted this yesterday on New Scientist;

[url= http://www.newscientist.com/blogs/shortsharpscience/assets_c/2011/03/ISSShuttle-thumb-600x418-118241.jp g" target="_blank">http://www.newscientist.com/blogs/shortsharpscience/assets_c/2011/03/ISSShuttle-thumb-600x418-118241.jp g"/> [/img][/url]
[i]Click for details[/i]
.
.
[b]EDIT: Bah.... too slow...[/b]


 
Posted : 04/03/2011 11:59 am
 Drac
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Getting such a shot was โ€˜the holy grail of International Space Station imagingโ€™, said the 40-year-old from the Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire.

The IT manager..

Ooh I bet he's a member on here.

If your posting pics like those of the pillar they need facts to go with them to give them true justice.

[i]The tower of gas that can be seen coming off the nebula is approximately 57 trillion miles (97 trillion km) high.[/i]


 
Posted : 04/03/2011 12:03 pm
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Not wishing to put a dampener on this thread, and I may have got it wrong, but aren't most of those star cloud type pictures taken with radio telescopes and then coloured in by computer ?
Still impressive stuff though.

Yup - I think so. Lots of sophisticated techniques used to render images in the visible-light spectrum

[i]"In this mosaic of broadband telescopic images, additional image data acquired with a narrow hydrogen alpha filter was used to bring out the pervasive tendrils of energized atomic hydrogen gas and the arc of the giant Barnard's Loop."[/i]

Not yer average dSLR...


 
Posted : 04/03/2011 5:07 pm
 Kuco
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Ghost Head nebula

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 04/03/2011 5:30 pm