Anonymous ID: ed575d July 5, 2023, 7:59 a.m. No.19127340   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7351 >>7429 >>7507

NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day

July 5, 2023

 

A Map of the Observable Universe

 

What if you could see out to the edge of the observable universe? You would see galaxies, galaxies, galaxies, and then, well, quasars, which are the bright centers of distant galaxies. To expand understanding of the very largest scales that humanity can see, a map of the galaxies and quasars found by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey from 2000 to 2020 out to near the edge of the observable universe has been composed. Featured here, one wedge from this survey encompasses about 200,000 galaxies and quasars out beyond a look-back time of 12 billion years and cosmological redshift 5. Almost every dot in the nearby lower part of the illustration represents a galaxy, with redness indicating increasing redshift and distance. Similarly, almost every dot on the upper part represents a distant quasar, with blue-shaded dots being closer than red. Clearly shown among many discoveries, gravity between galaxies has caused the nearby universe to condense and become increasingly more filamentary than the distant universe.

 

https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html?

Anonymous ID: ed575d July 5, 2023, 8:32 a.m. No.19127509   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19127479

Hunters be hunting

 

A Full Moon Illuminates Artemis I

Jul 3, 2023

 

A full moon was visible behind the Artemis I SLS (Space Launch System) rocket and Orion spacecraft at Launch Complex 39B at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida on June 14, 2022. The first in an increasingly complex series of missions, Artemis I tested SLS and Orion as an integrated system prior to crewed flights to the Moon.

 

https://www.nasa.gov/image-feature/a-full-moon-illuminates-artemis-i/