Astronomy Picture of the Day

115
Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer. provided by NASA and Michigan Technological University (MTU).
Astronomy Picture of the Day
322
🌌Jupiter and the Moons How many moons do you see? Many people would say one, referring to the Earth's Moon, prominent on the lower left. But take a closer look at the object on the upper right. That seeming-star is actually the planet Jupiter, and your closer look might reveal that it is not alone – it is surrounded by some of its largest moons. From left to right these Galilean Moons are Io, Ga ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
343
🌌Salt Water Remnants on Ceres Does Ceres have underground pockets of water? Ceres, the largest asteroid in the asteroid belt, was thought to be composed of rock and ice. At the same time, Ceres was known to have unusual bright spots on its surface. These bright spots were clearly imaged during Dawn's exciting approach in 2015. Analyses of Dawn images and spectra indicated that the bright spots a ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
358
🌌SS 433: Binary Star Micro-Quasar SS 433 is one of the most exotic star systems known. Its unremarkable name stems from its inclusion in a catalog of Milky Way stars which emit radiation characteristic of atomic hydrogen. Its remarkable behavior stems from a compact object, a black hole or neutron star, which has produced an accretion disk with jets. Because the disk and jets from SS 433 resembl ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
337
🌌NGC 6357: Cathedral to Massive Stars How massive can a normal star be? Estimates made from distance, brightness and standard solar models had given one star in the open cluster Pismis 24 over 200 times the mass of our Sun, making it one of the most massive stars known. This star is the brightest object located just above the gas front in the featured image. Close inspection of images taken with ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
343

marsHirise_ESP_035143_1325.jpg

jpg
672,506 Кб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
337
🌌Martian Chiaroscuro Deep shadows create dramatic contrasts between light and dark in this high-resolution close-up of the martian surface. Recorded on January 24, 2014 by the HiRISE camera on board the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, the scene spans about 1.5 kilometers. From 250 kilometers above the Red Planet the camera is looking down at a sand dune field in a southern highlands crater. Capture ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
336
🌌The Valley of Orion This exciting and unfamiliar view of the Orion Nebula is a visualization based on astronomical data and movie rendering techniques. Up close and personal with a famous stellar nursery normally seen from 1,500 light-years away, the digitally modeled frame transitions from a visible light representation based on Hubble data on the left to infrared data from the Spitzer Space T ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
346
© Martin Pugh

ngc474MP.jpg

jpg
309,295 Кб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
336
🌌Shell Galaxies in Pisces This intergalactic skyscape features a peculiar system of galaxies cataloged as Arp 227 some 100 million light-years distant. Swimming within the boundaries of the constellation Pisces, Arp 227 consists of the two galaxies prominent right of center, the curious shell galaxy NGC 474 and its blue, spiral-armed neighbor NGC 470. The faint, wide arcs or shells of NGC 474 co ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
343
© Alistair Symon

CygnusVeil_Symon_2000.jpg

jpg
1,63 Мб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
334
🌌Cygnus Skyscape In brush strokes of interstellar dust and glowing hydrogen gas, this beautiful skyscape is painted across the plane of our Milky Way Galaxy near the northern end of the Great Rift and the constellation Cygnus the Swan. Composed using 22 different images and over 180 hours of image data, the widefield mosaic spans an impressive 24 degrees across the sky. Alpha star of Cygnus, bri ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
338
🌌Visualization: A Black Hole Accretion Disk What would it look like to circle a black hole? If the black hole was surrounded by a swirling disk of glowing and accreting gas, then the great gravity of the black hole would deflect light emitted by the disk to make it look very unusual. The featured animated video gives a visualization. The video starts with you, the observer, looking toward the bl ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
341
© Miguel Claro

HdrMoon_Claro_2000.jpg

jpg
723,44 Кб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
333
🌌Crescent Moon HDR How come the crescent Moon doesn't look like this? For one reason, because your eyes can't simultaneously discern bright and dark regions like this. Called earthshine or the da Vinci glow, the unlit part of a crescent Moon is visible but usually hard to see because it is much dimmer than the sunlit arc. In our digital age, however, the differences in brightness can be artifici ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
336
🌌The Helix Nebula from Blanco and Hubble How did a star create the Helix nebula? The shapes of planetary nebula like the Helix are important because they likely hold clues to how stars like the Sun end their lives. Observations by the orbiting Hubble Space Telescope and the 4-meter Blanco Telescope in Chile, however, have shown the Helix is not really a simple helix. Rather, it incorporates two ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
347
© IMP Team

mars10_st_path_big.jpg

jpg
207,804 Кб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
347
🌌Yogi And Friends In 3D From July of 1997, a ramp from the Pathfinder lander, the Sojourner robot rover, airbags, a couch, Barnacle Bill and Yogi Rock appear together in this 3D stereo view of the surface of Mars. Barnacle Bill is the rock just left of the solar-paneled Sojourner. Yogi is the big friendly-looking boulder at top right. The "couch" is the angular rock shape visible near center on ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
341
© Hubble Heritage Project

M51Unwound.jpg

jpg
131,037 Кб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
355
🌌Unwinding M51 The arms of a grand design spiral galaxy 60,000 light-years across are unwound in this digital transformation of the magnificent 2005 Hubble Space Telescope portrait of M51. In fact, M51 is one of the original spiral nebulae, its winding arms described by a mathematical curve known as a logarithmic spiral, a spiral whose separation grows in a geometric way with increasing distance ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
348

PIA21923_fig1SeeingTitan2400.jpg

jpg
2,09 Мб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
346
🌌Seeing Titan Shrouded in a thick atmosphere, Saturn's largest moon Titan really is hard to see. Small particles suspended in the upper atmosphere cause an almost impenetrable haze, strongly scattering light at visible wavelengths and hiding Titan's surface features from prying eyes. But Titan's surface is better imaged at infrared wavelengths where scattering is weaker and atmospheric absorptio ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
338
🌌TYC 8998-760-1: Multiple Planets around a Sun Like Star Do other stars have planets like our Sun? Previous evidence shows that they do, coming mostly from slight shifts in the star's light created by the orbiting planets. Recently, however, and for the first time, a pair of planets has been directly imaged around a Sun-like star. These exoplanets orbit the star designated TYC 8998-760-1 and are ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
345
© Jingyi Zhang

PerseidBridge_Zhang_4032.jpg

jpg
1,9 Мб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
340
🌌Perseids Around the Milky Way Why would meteor trails appear curved? The arcing effect arises only because the image artificially compresses (nearly) the whole sky into a rectangle. The meteors are from the Perseid Meteor Shower that peaked last week. The featured multi-frame image combines not only different directions from the 360 projection, but different times when bright Perseid meteors mo ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
342

NGC6814_HubbleSchmidt_3970.jpg

jpg
7,67 Мб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
346
🌌NGC 6814: Grand Design Spiral Galaxy from Hubble In the center of this serene stellar swirl is likely a harrowing black-hole beast. The surrounding swirl sweeps around billions of stars which are highlighted by the brightest and bluest. The breadth and beauty of the display give the swirl the designation of a grand design spiral galaxy. The central beast shows evidence that it is a supermassive ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
356
© Sergio Scauso

MoonOverMars_Scauso_1202.jpg

jpg
177,288 Кб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
350
🌌Mars at the Moon's Edge Does the Moon ever block out Mars? Yes, the Moon occasionally moves in front of all of the Solar System's planets. Just this past Sunday, as visible from some locations in South America, a waning gibbous Moon eclipsed Mars. The featured image from Córdoba, Argentina captured this occultation well, showing a familiar cratered Moon in the foreground with the bright planet ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
354

NGC5189_HubbleVargas_4039.jpg

jpg
1,6 Мб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
362
🌌NGC 5189: An Unusually Complex Planetary Nebula Why is this nebula so complex? When a star like our Sun is dying, it will cast off its outer layers, usually into a simple overall shape. Sometimes this shape is a sphere, sometimes a double lobe, and sometimes a ring or a helix. In the case of planetary nebula NGC 5189, however, besides an overall "Z" shape (the featured image is flipped horizont ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
350
© Marcin Zając

AlienThrone_Zajac_3807.jpg

jpg
3,07 Мб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
352
🌌Jupiter and Saturn Rising Beyond Alien Throne Rock What planets are those behind that unusual rock spire? Saturn (lower left) and Jupiter.  This month, after sunset, the bright planetary duo are quite prominent toward the southeast.  Now your view of our Solar System's largest planets might not include a picturesque hoodoo in the foreground, nor the spectacular central band of our Milky Way Gal ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
345
© Ignacio Llorens

NeowiseSequence_Llorens_3044_annotated.jpg

jpg
1,13 Мб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
357
🌌The Shifting Tails of Comet NEOWISE Keep your eye on the ion tail of Comet NEOWISE. A tale of this tail is the trail of the Earth. As with all comets, the blue ion tail always points away from the Sun. But as Comet C/2020 F3 (NEOWISE) rounded our Sun, its ion tail pointed in slightly different directions. This is because between 2020 July 17 and July 25 when the featured images were taken, the ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
344

JupiterChurning_JunoGill_3279.jpg

jpg
689,038 Кб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
344
🌌Churning Clouds on Jupiter Where is Jupiter's ammonia? Gaseous ammonia was expected to be seen in Jupiter's upper atmosphere by the orbiting Juno spacecraft -- but in many clouds is almost absent. Recent Juno data, however, gives some clues: some high-level clouds appear to be home to an unexpected type of electrical discharge dubbed shallow lightning. Great charge separations are needed for li ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
333
© Petr Horálek

NightOfThePerseids_Horalek_1800.jpg

jpg
423,955 Кб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
335
🌌Perseids from Perseus Where are all these meteors coming from? In terms of direction on the sky, the pointed answer is the constellation of Perseus. That is why the meteor shower that peaks tomorrow night is known as the Perseids -- the meteors all appear to came from a radiant toward Perseus. In terms of parent body, though, the sand-sized debris that makes up the Perseids meteors come from Co ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
342

Nucleosynthesis2_WikipediaCmglee_2000.jpg

jpg
547,603 Кб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
337
🌌The Origin of Elements The hydrogen in your body, present in every molecule of water, came from the Big Bang. There are no other appreciable sources of hydrogen in the universe. The carbon in your body was made by nuclear fusion in the interior of stars, as was the oxygen. Much of the iron in your body was made during supernovas of stars that occurred long ago and far away. The gold in your jew ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
324

CrescentSaturn_cassini_4824.jpg

jpg
636,15 Кб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
318
🌌Crescent Saturn From Earth, Saturn never shows a crescent phase. But when viewed from a spacecraft the majestic giant planet can show just a sunlit slice. This image of crescent Saturn in natural color was taken by the robotic Cassini spacecraft in 2007. It captures Saturn's rings from the side of the ring plane opposite the Sun -- the unilluminated side -- another vista not visible from Earth. ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
332
© Jose Mtanos

pipenebula_rc3.jpg

jpg
7,38 Мб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
337
🌌The Pipe Nebula st of Antares, dark markings sprawl through crowded star fields toward the center of our Milky Way Galaxy. Cataloged in the early 20th century by astronomer E. E. Barnard, the obscuring interstellar dust clouds include B59, B72, B77 and B78, seen in against the starry background. Here, their combined shape suggests a pipe stem and bowl, and so the dark nebula's popular name is t ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
339
© Emanuele Petrilli

trifidnebulaM20M21_2048.jpg

jpg
1,65 Мб