Yesterday you observed strange and incomprehensible crop circles that might have been left by aliens :-), and today we’ll look into space...

The Hubble Telescope, launched by NASA in 1990, is, unlike most telescopes, not on Earth, but directly in orbit, so the images it takes are 7-10 times higher quality due to the absence of an atmosphere. Maintenance is carried out by astronauts during special flights, once every three years.

Theoretically, anyone can gain access to observations through Hubble; they just need to submit an application and justify the need to look through the telescope. But, alas, not everything is so simple - there are a huge number of applications, so the competition is very tough, and most applicants have to be content with photographs.

However, looking at the photographs taken by this telescope, one cannot even believe that this is reality and not a frame from some science fiction film. Truly, the Universe is infinite, and there are countless miracles in it. Today I offer you a selection of 50 of the most interesting photographs taken from Hubble, in standard and large sizes, which you can download from the links and set as a background on your desktop.

01 Two galaxies merge into one. At this time, billions of stars and constellations are born

02 In the photo, the Crab Nebula is an object with a very complex structure and the ability to change extremely quickly.

03 Explosion of gas and dust in the diffuse nebula M-16 Eagle in the Serpent. The height of the column of dust and gas emerging from the nebula is about 90 trillion kilometers, which is twice the distance from our Sun to the nearest star.

04 Galaxy M-51 in the constellation Canes Venatici, or whirlpool galaxy. Next to it is another smaller galaxy. The distance to them is 31 million light years.

05 Planetary nebula NGS 6543, similar to the All-Seeing Eye from Tolkien's Lord of the Rings trilogy. Such nebulae are very rare.

06 Planetary Helix Nebula, in the center of which there is a slowly fading star.

07 Meet the newborn stars in region N90, the Small Magellanic Cloud.

08 Gas explosion in the planetary Ring Nebula, constellation Lyra. The distance from the nebula to our Earth is 2000 light years.

09 Spiral galaxy NGS 52, the birth of new stars

10 View of the Orion Nebula. This is the closest region to Earth where new stars are born - “only” 1,500 light years away.


11 A gas explosion in the planetary nebula NGS 6302 created what looked like butterfly wings. The temperature of the substance in each of the “wings” is about 20 thousand degrees Celsius, and the speed of particle movement is 950 thousand kilometers per hour. At this speed, you can get from Earth to the Moon in 24 minutes.

12 And this is what quasars, or the nuclei of the first galaxies, looked like several hundred million years after the Big Bang. Quasars are among the brightest and most ancient objects in the Universe.

13 A unique photograph of the narrow galaxy NGS 8856, turned sideways towards us.

14 Rainbow tints in a fading star.

15 The Centaurus A Galaxy is one of the closest to us (12 million light years).

16 The appearance of new stars in the Messier Galaxy, Orion Nebula.

17 The birth of a star in the Orion Nebula, a cosmic vortex.

18 A column of gas and dust about 7 light-years high in the constellation Monoceros, 2500 light-years from our planet.

19 One of the best photographs taken from the Hubble telescope is the crossed spiral galaxy NGS 1300.

20 The Sombrero Galaxy, located 28 million light years from Earth, is one of the most interesting and beautiful in the Universe.

21 This is not a bas-relief depicting ancient heroes, but just a column of dust and gas 7500 light years away.

22 Birth of new stars in the Milky Way

23 The play of light and shadow in the constellation Carina, 7500 light years from Earth.

24 Emission of gas from a dying star, a white dwarf the size of our Sun


25 Clearance in the Orion Nebula

26 Stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a dwarf galaxy located 168 thousand light years away.


27 The Messier Galaxy, in which new stars appear 10 times more often than in the Milky Way.


28 Cloud of dust and gas in the constellation Carina

29 Young stars in a relatively new galaxy. The mass of the smallest star is half that of our Sun.

30 Nebula in the constellation Carina

31 Black hole

32 An amazingly beautiful spiral galaxy in the constellation Ophiuchus, near the center of the Milky Way

33 Solar system. Although this is not a photograph from the Hubble telescope, I really liked it and will look very nice as a desktop background;-)

34 Planetary Nebula "Necklace"

35 Red giant - a star in the constellation Monoceros

36 Spiral galaxy, the distance to it is 85 million light years.

37 Clouds of cosmic dust in the Milky Way

38 A very beautiful spiral galaxy 11.6 million light years from Earth

39 Center of our Galaxy


For more than 25 years, the legendary Hubble telescope has been successfully traveling through the vastness of space, conveying to humanity invaluable knowledge about the most remote areas of our Universe. On April 24, 1990, the American spacecraft Discovery delivered the telescope into low-Earth orbit, where it remains to this day. During this time, more than a million unique images of distant galaxies and celestial bodies were transmitted to Earth.

It was from photographs taken by Hubble that scientists were able to find out the approximate age of the Universe (13.7 billion years), confirm the theory of the existence of black holes, and find out how stars and galaxies are born and die. A lot of effort and 6 billion dollars were spent on the telescope, all in order to learn at least something new about the worlds around us. Now we will show you the most famous photographs of Hubble, which completely changed the idea of ​​distance and time, speed and size. Enjoy watching!

Horsehead Nebula

Each year, the Hubble team releases the best photograph taken by the telescope to celebrate the anniversary of the launch on April 24. This year, an amazing photograph of the Horsehead Nebula, which is located in the constellation Orion at a distance of more than 1,500 light years from our planet, was demonstrated.

M16 or Pillars of Creation

This is perhaps the most famous image of Hubble and space in general. The first photograph was taken by the telescope back in 1995, the second image in higher quality was published on January 1, 2015. The image shows giant accumulations of interstellar gas and dust in the Eagle Nebula. In fact, the explosion that formed the Pillars occurred approximately 6,000 years ago, and the distance to the Eagle Nebula itself is 7,000 light years. This means that in fact the Pillars of Creation no longer exist, and we will be able to observe their destruction on Earth only after a thousand years.

Cat's Eye Nebula

Cat's Eye, officially named NGC 6543, is a unique planetary nebula in the constellation Draco. This is one of the most complex nebulae in structure. The image, taken by Hubble in 1994, shows many different tangles and bright arc-shaped features. At the center of the nebula there is a huge halo with a diameter of 3000 light years, consisting of gaseous matter.

Andromeda Galaxy

In 2014, the Hubble telescope took the highest-quality photograph of the Andromeda galaxy ever recorded. This galaxy is the closest to the Milky Way among the giant galaxies. Most likely, our galaxy looks identical to Andromeda. The billions of stars that make up Andromeda together form a powerful diffuse glow.

Crab Nebula

The Crab Nebula, or M1, was created by a supernova explosion in the constellation Taurus. According to the records of Arab and Chinese astronomers, they observed this explosion back in 1054 AD. The nebula is filled with mysterious filaments, and at its center is a pulsar - a neutron star with a mass equal to the mass of the Sun, which emits powerful gamma-ray pulses.

Star V838 Mon

For unknown reasons, the star V838, located in the constellation Monoceros, experienced a powerful explosion in early 2002. After the explosion, V838's outer shell suddenly expanded, making it the brightest star in the entire Milky Way. After this, just as suddenly, the star became weak again. Scientists have not yet figured out the cause of this explosion.

Ring Nebula

The Ring Nebula was discovered by Antoine Darquier in 1779 and gets its name from its distinct ring-shaped collection of gas. The nebula consists of clouds of gas that stars eject before the end of their lives. Today, the Ring Nebula is the most popular object of observation among amateur astronauts; it is clearly visible even in strong city light at any time of the year.

Column and jets in the Carina Nebula

This amazing photograph taken by Hubble shows a huge cosmic column of gas and dust located in the Carina Nebula. Inside the column there are many nascent stars that form powerful jets - emissions of gas and plasma observed along their axis of rotation.

Butterfly Nebula

The bipolar planetary nebula in the constellation Scorpius got its name due to its resemblance to the wings of a butterfly. At the center of the nebula is probably one of the hottest stars in the Universe - its temperature exceeds 200,000°C.

Supernova

This Hubble photograph shows a supernova that exploded in 1994 on the outskirts of the Spiral Galaxy.

Galaxy Sombrero

The Sombrero spiral galaxy or M104 is located in the constellation Virgo at a distance of 28 million light years from Earth. Recent research has shown that Sombrero is actually a cluster of two galaxies. In 1990, the Hubble team found that at the center of the Sombrero galaxies there is a supermassive black hole with a mass of 1 billion solar masses.

NebulaS106

The massive star IRS 4 spreads its wings. The newborn star, just 100,000 years old, ejects gas and dust from its depths, forming the Sharpless Nebula S 106, shown in this photograph.

Centaurus A

The image taken by Hubble in 2010 shows the lenticular galaxy Centaurus A (NGC 5128), located in the constellation Centaurus. In the photo, a stunning collection of young blue stars, huge glowing gas clouds and dark dust filaments surround the central part of the active galaxy Centaurus A.

Celestial Fireworks

A brilliant canvas of young stars resembles colorful fireworks. The photo was taken by Hubble's infrared camera, which can reduce noise and hide the dust surrounding stars.

Galaxy whirlpool

M 51 is a galaxy located in the constellation Canes Venatici at a distance of 23 million years from Earth. The Whirlpool Galaxy consists of the large spiral galaxy NGC 5194, which has the dwarf galaxy NGC 5195 on its right arm.

If you read to the end, you might be interested

Huge archives of photographs taken by Hubble can be seen on HubbleSite, an official subsite of NASA or ESA, a site dedicated to

We present to you a selection of images taken using the Hubble orbital telescope. It has been in orbit of our planet for more than twenty years and continues to reveal to us the secrets of space to this day.

(Total 30 photos)

Known as NGC 5194, this large galaxy with a well-developed spiral structure may have been the first spiral nebula discovered. It is clearly visible that its spiral arms and dust lanes pass in front of its satellite galaxy, NGC 5195 (left). The pair are located about 31 million light years away and officially belong to the small constellation Canes Venatici.

2. Spiral Galaxy M33

Spiral galaxy M33 is a medium-sized galaxy from the Local Group. M33 is also called the Triangulum galaxy after the constellation in which it is located. About 4 times smaller (in radius) than our Milky Way Galaxy and the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), M33 is much larger than many dwarf galaxies. Because M33 is close to M31, some think it is a satellite of this more massive galaxy. M33 is not far from the Milky Way, its angular dimensions are more than twice the size of the full Moon, i.e. it is perfectly visible with good binoculars.

3. Stefan Quintet

The group of galaxies is Stefan's Quintet. However, only four galaxies in the group, located three hundred million light years away, participate in the cosmic dance, moving closer and further away from each other. It's quite easy to find extra ones. The four interacting galaxies - NGC 7319, NGC 7318A, NGC 7318B and NGC 7317 - have yellowish colors and curved loops and tails, the shape of which is caused by the influence of destructive tidal gravitational forces. The bluish galaxy NGC 7320, pictured above left, is much closer than the others, just 40 million light-years away.

4. Andromeda Galaxy

The Andromeda Galaxy is the closest giant galaxy to our Milky Way. Most likely, our Galaxy looks about the same as the Andromeda Galaxy. These two galaxies dominate the Local Group of galaxies. The hundreds of billions of stars that make up the Andromeda Galaxy combine to produce a visible, diffuse glow. The individual stars in the image are actually stars in our Galaxy, located much closer to the distant object. The Andromeda Galaxy is often called M31 because it is the 31st object in Charles Messier's catalog of diffuse celestial objects.

5. Lagoon Nebula

The bright Lagoon Nebula is home to many different astronomical objects. Particularly interesting objects include a bright open star cluster and several active star forming regions. When viewed visually, the light from the cluster is lost against the overall red glow caused by hydrogen emission, while the dark filaments arise from the absorption of light by dense layers of dust.

6. Cat's Eye Nebula (NGC 6543)

The Cat's Eye Nebula (NGC 6543) is one of the most famous planetary nebulae in the sky. Its haunting, symmetrical shape is visible in the central portion of this dramatic false-color image, specially processed to reveal a huge but very faint halo of gaseous material, some three light-years in diameter, that surrounds the bright, familiar planetary nebula.

7. Small constellation Chameleon

The small constellation Chameleon is located near the south pole of the World. The picture reveals the amazing features of the modest constellation, which reveals many dusty nebulae and colorful stars. Blue reflection nebulae are scattered across the field.

8. Nebula Sh2-136

Cosmic dust clouds glowing faintly with reflected starlight. Far from familiar places on planet Earth, they lurk on the edge of the Cephei Halo molecular cloud complex, 1,200 light-years away. Nebula Sh2-136, located near the center of the field, is brighter than other ghostly apparitions. Its size is more than two light years, and it is visible even in infrared light.

9. Horsehead Nebula

The dark, dusty Horsehead Nebula and the glowing Orion Nebula contrast in the sky. They are located 1,500 light years away in the direction of the most recognizable celestial constellation. And in today's remarkable composite photograph, the nebulae occupy opposite corners. The familiar Horsehead Nebula is a small dark cloud in the shape of a horse's head, silhouetted against a background of red glowing gas in the lower left corner of the picture.

10. Crab Nebula

This confusion remained after the star exploded. The Crab Nebula is the result of a supernova explosion observed in 1054 AD. The supernova remnant is filled with mysterious filaments. The filaments are not just complex to look at. The extent of the Crab Nebula is ten light years. At the very center of the nebula is a pulsar - a neutron star with a mass equal to the mass of the Sun, which fits into an area the size of a small town.

11. Mirage from a gravitational lens

This is a mirage from a gravitational lens. The bright red galaxy (LRG) shown in this photograph has been distorted by its gravity to the light from a more distant blue galaxy. Most often, such a distortion of light leads to the appearance of two images of a distant galaxy, but in the case of a very precise superposition of the galaxy and the gravitational lens, the images merge into a horseshoe - an almost closed ring. This effect was predicted by Albert Einstein 70 years ago.

12. Star V838 Mon

For unknown reasons, in January 2002, the outer shell of the star V838 Mon suddenly expanded, making it the brightest star in the entire Milky Way. Then she became weak again, also suddenly. Astronomers have never seen a stellar flare like this before.

13. Birth of planets

How are planets formed? To try to find out, the Hubble Space Telescope was tasked with taking a closer look at one of the most interesting of all nebulae in the sky: the Great Orion Nebula. The Orion Nebula can be seen with the naked eye near the belt of the constellation Orion. The insets in this photo show numerous proplyds, many of them stellar nurseries that likely house forming planetary systems.

14. Star cluster R136

At the center of the star-forming region 30 Doradus lies a gigantic cluster of the largest, hottest, and most massive stars known to us. These stars form the R136 cluster, captured in this image taken in visible light by the upgraded Hubble Space Telescope.

Brilliant NGC 253 is one of the brightest spiral galaxies we see, but also one of the dustiest. Some call it the "Silver Dollar Galaxy" because it is shaped like that in a small telescope. Others simply call it the "Sculptor Galaxy" because it lies within the southern constellation Sculptor. This dusty galaxy is located 10 million light years away.

16. Galaxy M83

Galaxy M83 is one of the closest spiral galaxies to us. From the distance that separates us from her, equal to 15 million light years, she looks completely ordinary. However, if we take a closer look at the center of M83 using the largest telescopes, the region appears to be a turbulent and noisy place.

17. Ring Nebula

She really looks like a ring in the sky. Therefore, hundreds of years ago, astronomers named this nebula according to its unusual shape. The Ring Nebula is also designated M57 and NGC 6720. The Ring Nebula belongs to the class of planetary nebulae; these are gas clouds that emit stars similar to the Sun at the end of their lives. Its size exceeds the diameter. This is one of Hubble's early images.

18. Column and jets in the Carina Nebula

This cosmic column of gas and dust is two light years wide. The structure is located in one of the largest star-forming regions of our Galaxy, the Carina Nebula, which is visible in the southern sky and is 7,500 light-years away.

19. Center of the Omega Centauri globular cluster

At the center of the globular cluster Omega Centauri, the stars are packed ten thousand times more densely than the stars in the vicinity of the Sun. The image shows many faint yellow-white stars smaller than our Sun, several orange red giants, and the occasional blue star. If two stars suddenly collide, they may form one more massive star, or they may form a new binary system.

20. A giant cluster distorts and splits the image of the galaxy

Many of them are images of a single unusual, beady, blue ring-shaped galaxy that happens to be located behind a giant cluster of galaxies. According to recent research, in total, at least 330 images of individual distant galaxies can be found in the picture. This stunning photograph of the galaxy cluster CL0024+1654 was taken by the NASA Space Telescope. Hubble in November 2004.

21. Trifid Nebula

The beautiful multi-colored Trifid Nebula allows you to explore cosmic contrasts. Also known as M20, it lies about 5,000 light-years away in the nebula-rich constellation Sagittarius. The size of the nebula is about 40 light years.

22. Centaurus A

A fantastic array of young blue star clusters, giant glowing gas clouds and dark dust lanes surround the central region of the active galaxy Centaurus A. Centaurus A is close to Earth, 10 million light years away.

23. Butterfly Nebula

Bright clusters and nebulae in Earth's night sky are often named after flowers or insects, and NGC 6302 is no exception. The central star of this planetary nebula is exceptionally hot: its surface temperature is about 250 thousand degrees Celsius.

24. Supernova

An image of a supernova that exploded in 1994 on the outskirts of a spiral galaxy.

25. Two colliding galaxies with merging spiral arms

This remarkable cosmic portrait shows two colliding galaxies with merging spiral arms. Above and to the left of the large spiral galaxy pair NGC 6050 can be seen a third galaxy that is also likely involved in the interaction. All of these galaxies are located about 450 million light-years away in the Hercules cluster of galaxies. At this distance, the image covers an area of ​​more than 150 thousand light years. And although this appearance seems quite unusual, scientists now know that collisions and subsequent mergers of galaxies are not uncommon.

26. Spiral Galaxy NGC 3521

Spiral galaxy NGC 3521 lies just 35 million light-years away in the direction of the constellation Leo. The galaxy, which extends over 50,000 light-years, has features such as jagged, irregular spiral arms festooned with dust, pinkish star-forming regions and clusters of young bluish stars.

27. Jet structure details

Although this unusual emission was first noticed in the early twentieth century, its origin is still the subject of debate. The image shown above, taken in 1998 by the Hubble Space Telescope, clearly shows details of the jet's structure. The most popular hypothesis suggests that the source of the ejection was heated gas orbiting a massive black hole at the center of the galaxy.

28. Sombrero Galaxy

Galaxy M104's appearance resembles a hat, which is why it is called the Sombrero Galaxy. The image shows distinct dark lanes of dust and a bright halo of stars and globular clusters. The reasons why the Sombrero Galaxy looks like a hat are the unusually large central stellar bulge and the dense dark lanes of dust located in the galaxy's disk, which we see almost edge-on.

29. M17: close-up view

Formed by stellar winds and radiation, these fantastic wave-like formations are found in the M17 (Omega Nebula) nebula and are part of a star-forming region. The Omega Nebula is located in the nebula-rich constellation Sagittarius and is 5,500 light-years away. The patchy clumps of dense, cold gas and dust are illuminated by radiation from the stars in the image at top right and could become sites of star formation in the future.

30. Nebula IRAS 05437+2502

What does the IRAS 05437+2502 nebula illuminate? There is no exact answer yet. Particularly puzzling is the bright, inverted V-shaped arc that outlines the top edge of the mountain-like clouds of interstellar dust near the center of the image. Overall, this ghost-like nebula includes a small star-forming region filled with dark dust. It was first spotted in infrared images taken by the IRAS satellite in 1983. Shown here is a remarkable, recently released image from the Hubble Space Telescope. Although it shows many new details, the cause of the bright, clear arc could not be determined.

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The planet we live on is extraordinarily beautiful. But who among us has not wondered, looking into the starry sky: what would life be like in other solar systems in our Milky Way galaxy or in others? So far, we don't even know if there is life there. But when you see this beauty, you want to think that it’s there for a reason, that everything makes sense, that if the stars light up, it means someone needs it.
You can indulge yourself immediately after watching these stunning photographs of cosmic phenomena in the Universe.

1
Galaxy Antenna

The Antennae Galaxy was formed as a result of the merger of two galaxies, which began several hundred million years ago. The antenna is located 45 million light years from our solar system.

2
Young star

Two jets of energized gas flow are ejected from the poles of the young star.If the jets (flows of several hundred kilometers per second) collide with surrounding gas and dust, they can clear large areas and create curved shock waves.

3
Horsehead Nebula

The Horsehead Nebula, dark in optical light, appears transparent and ethereal in infrared, shown here, with visible tints.

4
Bubble Nebula

The image was taken in February 2016 using the Hubble Space Telescope.The nebula is 7 light-years across—about 1.5 times the distance from our sun to its nearest stellar neighbor, Alpha Centauri—and lies 7,100 light-years from Earth in the constellation Cassiopeia.

5
Helix Nebula

The Helix Nebula is a flaming envelope of gas formed by the death of a sun-like star. The helix consists of two gaseous disks almost perpendicular to each other, and is located 690 light years away, and is one of the closest planetary nebulae to Earth.

6
Jupiter's moon Io

Io is Jupiter's closest satellite.Io is about the size of our Moon and orbits Jupiterase1.8 days, while our Moon orbits the Earth every 28 days.A striking black spot on Jupiter is the shadow of Io, whichfloats across the face of Jupiter at a speed of 17 kilometers per second.

7
NGC 1300

Blocked spiral galaxy NGC 1300 odiffers from normal spiral galaxies in that the arms of the galaxy do not grow all the way into the center, but are connected to the two ends of a straight bar of stars containing the core at its center.The core of the major spiral structure of the galaxy NGC 1300 shows its own unique grand spiral structure design, which is about 3,300 light years away.The galaxy is distant from usapproximately 69 million light years in the direction of the constellation Eridanus.

8
Cat's Eye Nebula

Cat's Eye Nebula- one of the first planetary nebulae discovered, and one of the most complex, in observable space.A planetary nebula forms when sun-like stars carefully extract their outer gaseous layers, which form bright nebulae with amazing and complex structures..
The Cat's Eye Nebula is located 3,262 light-years from our solar system.

9
Galaxy NGC 4696

NGC 4696 is the largest Galaxy in the Centaurus cluster.New images from Hubble show the dust filaments around the center of this huge galaxy in more detail than ever before.These filaments curl inward in an intriguing spiral shape around the supermassive black hole.

10
Omega Centauri star cluster

The globular star cluster Omega Centauri contains 10 million stars and is the largest of the approximately 200 globular clusters orbiting our Milky Way Galaxy. Omega Centauri is located 17,000 light years from Earth.

11
Galaxy Penguin

Galaxy Penguin.From our Hubble perspective, this pair of interacting galaxies resembles a penguin guarding its egg. NGC 2936, once a standard spiral galaxy, is deformed and borders NGC 2937, a smaller elliptical galaxy.The galaxies lie about 400 million light years away in the constellation Hydra.

12
Pillars of Creation in the Eagle Nebula

The Pillars of Creation - the remnants of the central part of the gas-dust Eagle Nebula in the constellation Serpens, consist, like the entire nebula, mainly of cold molecular hydrogen and dust. The nebula is located 7,000 distant light years away.

13
Abell Galaxy Cluster S1063

This Hubble image shows a very chaotic Universe filled with galaxies far and near.Some are distorted like a distorted mirror due to the curvature of space, a phenomenon first predicted by Einstein a century ago.At the center of the image is the enormous galaxy cluster Abell S1063, located 4 billion light-years away.

14
Whirlpool Galaxy

The graceful, sinuous arms of the majestic spiral galaxy M51 appear like a great spiral staircase sweeping through space. They are actually long lanes of stars and gas, saturated with dust.

15
Stellar nurseries in the Carina Nebula

Billowing clouds of cold interstellar gas and dust rise from the raging Stellar Nursery, located 7,500 light-years away in the Southern constellation Carina.This pillar of dust and gas serves as an incubator for new stars.Hot, young stars and eroding clouds create this fantastic landscape, sending out stellar winds and scorching ultraviolet light.

16
Galaxy Sombrero

The distinctive feature of the Sombrero Galaxy is its brilliant white core, surrounded by a thick layer of dust, forming the spiral structure of the galaxy. Sombrero lies on the southern edge of the Virgo Cluster and is one of the most massive objects in the group, equivalent to 800 billion suns.The galaxy is 50,000 light years across and located 28 million light years from Earth.

17
Butterfly Nebula

What resemble graceful butterfly wings are actually cauldrons of gas heated to more than 36,000 degrees Fahrenheit. The gas rushes through space at more than 600,000 miles per hour. A dying star that was once about five times the mass of the Sun is at the center of this fury. The Butterfly Nebula is located in our Milky Way galaxy, approximately 3,800 light-years away in the constellation Scorpius.

18
Crab Nebula

Pulse at the core of the Crab Nebula. While many other images of the Crab Nebula have focused on filaments in the outer part of the nebula, this image shows the very heart of the nebula including the central neutron star - the rightmost of the two bright stars near the center of this image. A neutron star has the same mass as the sun, but is compressed into an incredibly dense sphere several kilometers in diameter. Rotating 30 times per second, the neutron star releases beams of energy that make it appear to pulsate. The Crab Nebula is located 6,500 light years away in the constellation Taurus.

19
Preplanetary nebula IRA 23166+1655


One of the most beautiful geometric shapes created in space, this image shows the formation of an unusual preplanetary nebula known as IRA 23166+1655 around the star LL Pegasi in the constellation Pegasus.

20
Retina Nebula

A dying star, IC 4406 shows a high degree of symmetry; the left and right halves of the Hubble image are almost mirror images of the other. If we could fly around IC 4406 in a spacecraft, we would see gas and dust forming a vast donut of substantial outflow from the dying star. From Earth, we view the donut from the side. This side view allows us to see tangled tendrils of dust that have been compared to the retina of the eye. The nebula is located about 2,000 light years away, near the southern constellation Lupus.

21
Monkey Head Nebula

NGC 2174 is located 6,400 light years away in the constellation Orion. The colorful region is filled with young stars trapped in bright wisps of cosmic gas and dust. This part of the Monkey Head Nebula was captured in 2014 by Hubble Camera 3.

22
Spiral Galaxy ESO 137-001

This galaxy looks strange. One side of it looks like a typical spiral galaxy, while the other side appears to be destroyed. The bluish stripes stretching down and to the sides from the galaxy are clusters of hot young stars trapped in jets of gas. These scraps of matter will never return to the bosom of the mother galaxy. Like a huge fish with its belly ripped open, the galaxy ESO 137-001 roams space, losing its insides.

23
Giant tornadoes in the Lagoon Nebula

This Hubble Space Telescope image shows long interstellar 'tornadoes' - eerie tubes and twisted structures - at the heart of the Lagoon Nebula, which lies 5,000 light-years in the direction of the constellation Sagittarius.

24
Gravity lenses in Abell 2218

This rich galaxy cluster consists of thousands of individual galaxies and is located about 2.1 billion light-years from Earth in the Northern constellation Draco. Astronomers use gravitational lenses to powerfully magnify distant galaxies. Strong gravitational forces not only magnify images of hidden galaxies, but also distort them into long, thin arcs.

25
Hubble's farthest position


Each object in this image is an individual galaxy made up of billions of stars. This view of nearly 10,000 galaxies is the deepest image of the cosmos yet. Called Hubble's “Far Farthest Field” (or Hubble's Ultra-Deep Field), this image presents a “deep” core sample of the universe shrinking across billions of light years. The image includes galaxies of various ages, sizes, shapes and colors. The smallest, reddest galaxies may be among the most distant, existing since the universe was just 800 million years old. The closest galaxies—larger, brighter, well-defined spirals and ellipticals—thrived about 1 billion years ago, when the cosmos was 13 billion years old. In stark contrast, along with the many classic spiral and elliptical galaxies, there is a zoo of oddball galaxies littering the area. Some look like toothpicks; others are like a link on a bracelet.
In ground-based photographs, the area of ​​the sky where the galaxies reside (merely one-tenth the diameter of a full moon) is mostly empty. The image required 800 exposures, taken over 400 Hubble orbits around the Earth. The total dwell time was 11.3 days spent between September 24, 2003 and January 16, 2004.

Images taken at extremely long distances using the Hubble Space Telescope, which left Earth exactly 25 years ago. The deadline is no joke. In the first photo, the Horsehead Nebula has graced astronomy books since its discovery nearly a century ago.

Jupiter's moon Ganymede is shown as it begins to disappear behind the giant planet. Consisting of rock and ice, the satellite is the largest in the solar system, even larger than the planet Mercury.


Resembling a butterfly and appropriately called the Butterfly Nebula, it consists of hot gas with a temperature of about 20,000°C and moves through the universe at a speed of more than 950,000 km per hour. You can get from Earth to the Moon at this speed in 24 minutes.


The Cone Nebula, approximately 23 million high, travels around the Moon. The entire extent of the nebula is about 7 light years. It is believed to be an incubator for new stars.


The Eagle Nebula is a mixture of cooled gas and dust from which stars are born. The height is 9.5 light years or 57 trillion miles, twice as long as the distance from the Sun to the nearest star.


The bright southern hemisphere of the star RS Puppis is surrounded by a reflective cloud of dust, hued like a lampshade. This star has 10 times the mass of the Sun and is 200 times larger.

The pillars of creation are located in the Eagle Nebula. They are made of stellar gas and dust and are located 7,000 light years from Earth.


This is the first time such a clear image has been taken from a wide-angle lens of the M82 galaxy. This galaxy is notable for its bright blue disk, network of scattered clouds, and fiery jets of hydrogen emanating from its center.

Hubble captured a rare moment of two spiral galaxies positioned on the same line: the first, small one, abuts the center of a larger one.

The Crab Nebula is a trace of a supernova, which was recorded by Chinese astronomers back in 1054. Thus, this nebula is the first astronomical object associated with a historical supernova explosion.

This beauty is the spiral galaxy M83, located 15 million light years from the nearest constellation, Hydra.


Sombrero Galaxy: stars located on the surface of the “pancake” and clustered in the center of the disk.


A pair of interacting galaxies called "Antennae". As the two galaxies collide, new stars are born, mostly in groups and star clusters.


The light echo of V838 Monoceros, a variable star in the constellation Monoceros, located about 20,000 light years away. In 2002, she survived an explosion, the cause of which is still unknown.


The massive star Eta Carinae, located in our native Milky Way. Many scientists believe it will soon explode to become a supernova.


A giant star-bearing nebula with massive star clusters.


The four moons of Saturn, taken by surprise as they pass by their "parent".


Two interacting galaxies: on the right is the large spiral NGC 5754, on the left is its younger companion.


The luminous remains of a star that went out thousands of years ago.


Butterfly Nebula: walls of compressed gas, stretched filaments, bubbling flows. Night, street, lantern.


Galaxy Black Eye. It is named so because of the black ring with seething inside that was formed as a result of an ancient explosion.


An unusual planetary nebula, NGC 6751. Glowing like an eye in the constellation Aquila, this nebula formed several thousand years ago from a hot star (visible at the very center).


Boomerang Nebula. The light-reflecting cloud of dust and gas has two symmetrical “wings” radiating from the central star.


Spiral Galaxy "Whirlpool". Winding arcs in which newborn stars live. In the center, where the old stars are better and more impressive.


Mars. 11 hours before the planet was at a record close distance from Earth (August 26, 2003).


Traces of a dying star in the Ant Nebula


A molecular cloud (or "star cradle"; astronomers are unfulfilled poets) called the Carina Nebula, located 7,500 light years from Earth. Somewhere in the south of the constellation Carina

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