¿Qué vio el Hubble en tu cumpleaños?

tute07011988

Pues como reza el título, en esta web de la NASA puedes ver qué imagen captaba el Hubble el día de tu cumpleaños.


On January 7 in 2010
Galaxy NGC 2841
Young, blue stars and dark lanes of dust trace the winding arms of NGC 2841. Winds from the young, super-hot stars may have cleared out the gas needed for additional star birth and halted star formation in the spiral galaxy.

17
verseker

On September 17 in 2014
Galaxy UGC 5340
This image captures the dwarf galaxy UGC 5340. A pocket of rapid star birth appears in the lower right corner. This region of star formation was probably triggered by a gravitational interaction with an unseen companion galaxy.

Me representa. Sobre todo por lo de las bolsas escrotales de la derecha. Y con diferencia de huevo incluida. Muy yo. Y encima por interacción con el huevo cercano. Así me provoqué yo una epididimitis. Ahora son risas pero...

5 1 respuesta
tute07011988

#2 Tenía una canica igual.

8
DrDr3

"This image captures the collision of two galaxies. The larger spiral galaxy, NGC 6745, boasts an intact nucleus as it interacts with the smaller, passing galaxy that is nearly out of the frame to the lower right."

1
Jastro
On March 11 in 2019
Southern Crab Nebula
An aging red giant star is shedding its outer layers to produce the Southern Crab Nebula. The "legs" are likely to be the places where the outflowing material slams into surrounding gas and dust.

12 2 respuestas
tute07011988

#5 Qué guapada y vaya cumple tuviste en 2004.

1 1 respuesta
Jastro

#6 fue una sorpresa de unos colegas, la verdad que ese año se lo curraron

4 1 respuesta
richmonde

Hubble Ultra Deep Field
This image of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field includes infrared observations that allowed Hubble to peer deeper into the universe than it ever had before. The faintest and reddest objects in the image are galaxies that formed 600 million years after the big bang.

On August 26 in 2009

Menuda locura. Que estamos solos en el universo, debería ser prohibido decirlo. Ahora... que hagamos contacto, es una historia completamente diferente.

3
EruGreen

Sombrero Galaxy
The Sombrero galaxy's hallmark is a brilliant white core encircled by thick lanes of dust. As seen from Earth, the spiral galaxy is tilted nearly edge-on.

On June 8 in 2003

Que chulo esta, gracias por compartirlo #1

7
granaino127

Todo esto para decirnos que el 7 de Enero es tu cumpleaños.... :full_moon_with_face:


Muy chula por cierto la web, gracias por compartirlo.

PD:

On December 25 in 2009

Galaxy NGC 4214

The dwarf galaxy NGC 4214 is ablaze with young stars and gas clouds. This image captures intricate patterns of glowing hydrogen shaped during the star-birthing process, cavities blown clear of gas by stellar winds, and bright stellar clusters.

NASA
7 1 respuesta
tute07011988

#10 Lo siguiente es ponérmelo en el avatar xddd

2
LR

On April 1 in 1995
Eagle Nebula Pillars
Hubble's view of the "Pillars of Creation" in the Eagle Nebula displays three giant columns of cold gas giving birth to new stars. The pillars are bathed in the scorching ultraviolet light from a cluster of young, massive stars beyond the top of the image.

5
Mikess

2
paladyr

4
Nyhz

On March 6 in 2012
Beta Pictoris Disk
In 1984, Beta Pictoris was the very first star discovered to be surrounded by a bright disk of light-scattering dust and debris. Planets are thought to form in such disks, and astronomers have discovered two planets orbiting Beta Pictoris.

Vaya movida.

3 1 respuesta
Zh3RoX

Supernova Remnant E0102
In a nearby galaxy called the Small Magellanic Cloud, a massive star exploded as a supernova and dissipated its interior into a spectacular display of colorful filaments. The supernova remnant, known as E0102, is the greenish-blue field of debris just below center.

Rarete que salga esto justo con el auge de las IAs. Me pongo el gorrito de plata jeje.

kokre

On November 8 in 2004
Star Cluster NGC 265
This image displays a cluster of stars called NGC 265. The cluster resides in the Small Magellanic Cloud, one of the small galaxies orbiting our Milky Way galaxy.
1
SilentMike

On April 18 in 1997
Globular Cluster M79
The globular star cluster M79 is located 41,000 light-years from Earth. It contains about 150,000 stars packed into an area measuring only 118 light-years across. Its stars are some of the oldest in our galaxy.

Sinso

La clásica M83

2
melonzuelo

On May 26 in 2003
Galaxy I Zwicky 18
This image captures the irregular dwarf galaxy I Zwicky 18 and a companion galaxy to its upper right. The two galaxies are interacting, triggering star formation in I Zwicky 18.

3
Kabraxis

On November 4 in 2010
Supernova Remnant 0509-67.5
This red bubble is made of gas that is being shocked by the expanding blast wave from a supernova explosion. Called SNR 0509-67.5, the bubble is 23 light-years across and is expanding at more than 11 million miles per hour.

4
TheGameNick

Aqui la mayoria de gente con imagenes muy bonitas, en cambio yo:

8 3 respuestas
richmonde

#22 Ostia, tenemos el primer duo del hilo del 26 de Agosto tocayo!

Bienvenido al club.

Ahora es cuando me dices el año, y hasta cumpliremos los mismos años y todo... xD

FMartinez


https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Objeto_Herbig-Haro

2
Kabraxis

#22 Pues tu imagen es precisamente la más impactante de todas las que podamos ver.

MaTrIx

On May 21 in 2000
Nebula NGC 1748
Extremely intense radiation from newly born, ultra-bright stars has blown a glowing, spherical bubble in the nebula NGC 1748. The average-looking star at the very center of the bubble is about 30 times more massive and almost 200,000 times brighter than our Sun.

#5 dios, es preciosa

2
C

On October 17 in 1996
Cartwheel Galaxy
The Cartwheel galaxy's unusual appearance was created by a nearly head-on collision with a smaller galaxy. Its spoke-like structures are wisps of material connecting the galaxy’s nucleus to an outer ring of young stars.

Blue_ogre

On December 9 in 2006
Supernova 1987A
This image shows the remnant of Supernova 1987A, a stellar explosion in a nearby galaxy that astronomers witnessed in 1987. A shock wave of material unleashed by the stellar blast is slamming into a surrounding ring of gas, causing it to glow

1 1 respuesta
Rogger

On September 18 in 1994
Pinwheel Galaxy
The Pinwheel galaxy has a pancake-like shape that we view face-on. This perspective shows off the spiral structure that gives the galaxy its nickname.

1
roberboni

On January 4 in 1998
Saturn in Infrared
This false-color image of Saturn captures infrared light reflecting off the planet. The image also captures two of Saturn's moons, Dione in the lower left and Tethys in the upper right.

2

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