Astronomy Picture of the Day
115 •
@nasa_apod
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
7
🌌A Milky Road to the Rubin Observatory
Is the sky the same every night? No -- the night sky changes every night in many ways. To better explore how the night sky changes, the USA's NSF and DOE commissioned the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Cerro Pachón, Chile. In final testing before routine operations, Rubin will begin to explore these nightly changes -- slight differences that can tell us much ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
9
© Miguel Claro (TWAN); Rollover Annotation: Judy Schmidt
GravityWaves_Claro_1486.jpg
jpg
1,05 Мб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
9
🌌Rainbow Airglow over the Azores
Why would the sky glow like a giant repeating rainbow? Airglow. Now, air glows all of the time, but it is usually hard to see. A disturbance however -- like an approaching storm -- may cause noticeable rippling in the Earth's atmosphere. These gravity waves are oscillations in air analogous to those created when a rock is thrown in calm water. The long-duration e ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
9
🌌Veil Nebula: Wisps of an Ancient Supernova
Wisps like this are all that remain visible of a Milky Way star. About 7,000 years ago that star exploded in a supernova, leaving the Veil Nebula. At the time, the expanding cloud was likely as bright as a crescent Moon, remaining visible for weeks to people living at the dawn of recorded history. Today, the resulting supernova remnant, also known as t ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
10
🌌UGC 1810: Wildly Interacting Galaxy from Hubble
What's happening to this spiral galaxy? Although details remain uncertain, it surely has to do with an ongoing battle with its smaller galactic neighbor. The featured galaxy is labelled UGC 1810 by itself, but together with its collisional partner is known as Arp 273. The overall shape of UGC 1810 -- in particular its blue outer ring -- is likely ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
12
🌌Afterimage Sunset
On May 7, the Sun setting behind a church bell tower was captured in this filtered and manipulated digital skyscape from Ragusa, Sicily, planet Earth. In this version of the image the colors look bizarre. Still, an intriguing optical illusion known as an afterimage can help you experience the same scene with a more natural looking appearance. To try it, find the sunspots of ac ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
13
🌌Mars in the Loop
This composite of images spaced a weather-permitting 5 to 9 days apart, from 2024 September 19 (top right) through 2025 May 18 (bottom left), faithfully traces ruddy-colored Mars as it makes a clockwise loop through the constellations Gemini and Cancer in planet Earth's night sky. You can connect the dots and dates with your cursor over the image, but be sure to check out this ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
13
🌌Irregular Dwarf Galaxy Sextans A
Grand spiral galaxies often seem to get all the attention, flaunting young, bright, blue star clusters and pinkish star forming regions along graceful, symmetric spiral arms. But small galaxies form stars too, like irregular dwarf galaxy Sextans A. Its young star clusters and star forming regions are gathered into a gumdrop-shaped region a mere 5,000 light-years ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
15
hs-2015-42-a-fullHH24.jpg
jpg
1,06 Мб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
14
🌌Herbig-Haro 24
This might look like a double-bladed lightsaber, but these two cosmic jets actually beam outward from a newborn star in a galaxy near you. Constructed from Hubble Space Telescope image data, the stunning scene spans about half a light-year across Herbig-Haro 24 (HH 24), some 1,300 light-years or 400 parsecs away in the stellar nurseries of the Orion B molecular cloud complex. Hid ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
15
🌌Zeta and Rho Ophiuchi with Milky Way
Behold one of the most photogenic regions of the night sky, captured impressively. Featured, the band of our Milky Way Galaxy runs diagonally along the bottom-left corner, while the colorful Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex is visible just right of center and the large red circular Zeta Ophiuchi Nebula appears near the top. In general, red emanates from nebulas gl ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
16
NGC2256_Webb_1280.jpg
jpg
425,389 Кб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
16
🌌Spiral Galaxy NGC 2566 from Webb
What’s happening in the center of spiral galaxy NGC 2566? First, the eight rays that appear to be coming out of the center in the featured infrared image are not real — they are diffraction spikes caused by the mechanical structure of the Webb space telescope itself. The center of NGC 2566 is bright but not considered unusual, which means that it likely contains ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
18
© NASA, Juno, SwRI, MSSS; Processing & License: Gerald Eichstädt & Seán Doran
BeneathJupiter_Juno_vertical960.jpg
jpg
164,87 Кб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
17
🌌Beneath Jupiter
Jupiter is stranger than we knew. NASA's Juno spacecraft has now completed over 70 swoops past Jupiter as it moves around its highly elliptical orbit. Pictured from 2017, Jupiter is seen from below where, surprisingly, the horizontal bands that cover most of the planet disappear into swirls and complex patterns. A line of white oval clouds is visible nearer to the equator. Impre ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
19
PIA26556_2048.jpg
jpg
2,2 Мб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
18
🌌Deimos Before Sunrise
Deimos takes 30 hours and 18 minutes to complete one orbit around the Red Planet. That's a little more than one Martian day or sol which is about 24 hours and 40 minutes long, so Deimos drifts westward across the Martian sky. About 15 kilometers across at its widest, the smallest of Mars' two moons is bright though. In fact Deimos is the brightest celestial object in this ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
19
🌌NGC 6366 vs 47 Ophiuchi
Most globular star clusters roam the halo of our Milky Way galaxy, but globular cluster NGC 6366 lies close to the galactic plane. About 12,000 light-years away toward the constellation Ophiuchus, the cluster's starlight is dimmed and reddened by the Milky Way's interstellar dust when viewed from planet Earth. As a result, the stars of NGC 6366 look almost golden in this ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
20
🌌Curly Spiral Galaxy M63
A bright spiral galaxy of the northern sky, Messier 63 is nearby, about 30 million light-years distant toward the loyal constellation Canes Venatici. Also cataloged as NGC 5055, the majestic island universe is nearly 100,000 light-years across, about the size of our own Milky Way. Its bright core and majestic spiral arms lend the galaxy its popular name, The Sunflower Ga ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
21
🌌International Space Station Crosses the Sun
Typically, the International Space Station is visible only at night. Slowly drifting across the night sky as it orbits the Earth, the International Space Station (ISS) can be seen as a bright spot about once a month from many locations. The ISS is then visible only just after sunset or just before sunrise because it shines by reflected sunlight -- onc ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
22
🌌Milky Way over Maunakea
Have you ever seen the band of our Milky Way Galaxy? In a clear sky from a dark location at the right time, a faint band of light becomes visible across the sky. Soon after your eyes become dark adapted, you might spot the band for the first time. It may then become obvious. Then spectacular. One reason for your growing astonishment might be the realization that this fuz ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
26
PIA19363.jpg
jpg
985,056 Кб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
26
🌌Ares 3 Landing Site: The Martian Revisited
This close-up from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter's HiRISE camera shows weathered craters and windblown deposits in southern Acidalia Planitia. A striking shade of blue in standard HiRISE image colors, to the human eye the area would probably look grey or a little reddish. But human eyes have not gazed across this terrain, unless you count the eyes of ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
28
M101_hst6000.jpg
jpg
9,93 Мб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
27
🌌Messier 101
Big, beautiful spiral galaxy M101 is one of the last entries in Charles Messier's famous catalog, but definitely not one of the least. About 170,000 light-years across, this galaxy is enormous, almost twice the size of our own Milky Way. M101 was also one of the original spiral nebulae observed by Lord Rosse's large 19th century telescope, the Leviathan of Parsontown. Assembled from ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
28
Pluto-Mountains-Plains9-17-15.jpg
jpg
286,745 Кб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
28
🌌A Plutonian Landscape
This shadowy landscape of majestic mountains and icy plains stretches toward the horizon on a small, distant world. It was captured from a range of about 18,000 kilometers when New Horizons looked back toward Pluto, 15 minutes after the spacecraft's closest approach on July 14, 2015. The dramatic, low-angle, near-twilight scene follows rugged mountains formally known as No ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
29
© Andrea Iorio, Vikas Chander & ShaRA Team
NGC1360_Chander_4310.jpg
jpg
1,26 Мб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
29
🌌NGC 1360: The Robin's Egg Nebula
This pretty nebula lies some 1,500 light-years away, its shape and color in this telescopic view reminiscent of a robin's egg. The cosmic cloud spans about 3 light-years, nestled securely within the boundaries of the southern constellation of the Furnace (Fornax). Recognized as a planetary nebula, egg-shaped NGC 1360 doesn't represent a beginning, though. Instea ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
29
MilkyWayTop_Gaia_2100.jpg
jpg
898,571 Кб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
29
🌌Gaia Reconstructs a Top View of our Galaxy
What does our Milky Way Galaxy look like from the top? Because we are on the inside, humanity can’t get an actual picture. Recently, however, just such a map has been made using location data for over a billion stars from ESA’s Gaia mission. The resulting featured illustration shows that just like many other spiral galaxies, our Milky Way has distinct ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
29
MilkyWaySide_Gaia_5000.jpg
jpg
1,8 Мб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
30
🌌Gaia Reconstructs a Side View of our Galaxy
What does our Milky Way Galaxy look like from the side? Because we are on the inside, humanity can’t get an actual picture. Recently, however, just such a map has been made using location data for over a billion stars from ESA’s Gaia mission. The resulting featured illustration shows that just like many other spiral galaxies, our Milky Way has a very ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
30
🌌The Surface of Venus from Venera 14
If you could stand on Venus -- what would you see? Pictured is the view from Venera 14, a robotic Soviet lander which parachuted and air-braked down through the thick Venusian atmosphere in March of 1982. The desolate landscape it saw included flat rocks, vast empty terrain, and a featureless sky above Phoebe Regio near Venus' equator. On the lower left is th ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
33
mars10_st_path_big.jpg
jpg
207,804 Кб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
32
🌌Yogi and Friends in 3D
This picture from July 1997 shows a ramp from the Pathfinder lander, the Sojourner robot rover, deflated landing 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 house cat-sized, solar-paneled Sojourner. Yogi is the big friendly-looking boulder at top right. The "couch" ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
32
BLlac_NasaGarcia_4580.jpg
jpg
3,85 Мб
Astronomy Picture of the Day
33
🌌IXPE Explores a Black Hole Jet
How do black holes create X-rays? Answering this long-standing question was significantly advanced recently with data taken by NASA’s IXPE satellite. X-rays cannot exit a black hole, but they can be created in the energetic environment nearby, in particular by a jet of particles moving outward. By observing X-ray light arriving from near the supermassive black hol ...
Astronomy Picture of the Day
33
Crab_Webb_998.jpg
jpg
226,593 Кб