Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - What art do you know exists in deep space?

What art do you know exists in deep space?

There are many beautiful scenery in this world, the majesty of waterfalls, the majesty of mountains, the beauty of scenery and so on. In addition to the natural scenery, there are of course many cultural landscapes that make people sigh. However, in the distant deep space, there are also many amazing scenery that make people marvel at the magic of this world. Let me introduce these beautiful scenery below.

The beautiful large spiral galaxy NGC 6744 is about 175,000 light-years across, making it larger than our Milky Way. It is 30 million light-years away from us and spans about a full moon angle. The colorful galaxy image has a strong sense of depth. The yellow core of this giant galaxy is caused by light from some old, cold stars. In addition to the core, spiral arms of young blue star clusters and pink star-forming regions sweep across a small satellite system at lower left. This satellite system reminds us of the satellite system of the Milky Way.

When the Cassini spacecraft first saw Saturn's far north in sunlight, it used its wide-angle camera to record beautiful photos of the ringed planet's north pole. A recent composite of infrared data shows lower clouds in red and upper clouds in green, making Saturn's cloudscapes extremely vivid. Other atmospheric vortices are also huge yellow-green, six-sided jet streams called hexagonal clouds. In addition to the cloud tops in the upper right corner, Saturn's eye-catching rings appear bright blue.

The Horsehead Nebula in the constellation Orion is one of the most easily recognized nebulae in the sky and is part of a large dark molecular cloud. This rare shape, also called Barnard 33, was first discovered on a photographic plate in the late 19th century. Its red light comes mainly from behind the nebula, and is added by nearby bright stars, adding ionized hydrogen gas. The Horsehead Nebula's dark color is primarily caused by dense dust, although the lower part of the Horse's neck also casts a dark shadow to the left. The gas streams leaving the nebula are collected by strong magnetic fields. The bright spots in the lower part of the Horsehead Nebula are young stars that are forming.

The Crab Nebula pulsar is a city-sized magnetized neutron star that rotates 30 times per second and is located at the center of this wide-angle image of the Crab Nebula. This stunning image of one of the Milky Way's supernova remnants combines optical survey data with X-ray data from the Chandra astronomical satellite. This composite image commemorates the Chandra satellite's 15 years of exploring the high-energy universe. Like a cosmic dynamo, this pulsar feeds the nebula with visible light and X-ray radiation, accelerating charged particles to extreme energies, creating jets and ring structures.

The Butterfly Nebula is also called the Papillon Nebula. It is the beautiful planetary nebula in the constellation Ophiuchus. About 150 light-years in size, it is located in our neighbor's Large Magellanic Cloud, about 170,000 light-years away from Earth. It has a pair of very symmetrical bipolar structures, like butterfly wings. The details of the physical mechanisms that form this bipolar planetary nebula are currently unclear. What is certain is that it has a disk of gas at its center, and at the center of the disk are two stars entwined with each other. It is when the pair of stars are about to die that they eject gas from the gas disk, and the hot gas spreads to both ends, forming this bipolar appearance.

The Eye of God Helix Nebula is 650 light-years away from Earth and is located in the constellation Aquarius. This nebula has been cataloged as NGC7293 and is a very typical type of planetary nebula. Planets are actually formed from the remnants of stars, just like our sun. The blue pupil and white eyeball are surrounded by flesh-colored eyelids, which are very similar to eyes, but God's eye is actually vast, and the light it emits takes five to six years to travel from one side to the other. The star is actually a shell of gas and dust blown in from a dark star in the center of the constellation Aquarius.

After seeing so many beautiful scenery, I believe you are also sighing at the magic of the universe. These are only the scenery within the range that we can observe, and there are more. Wherever you see it, I believe there are more beautiful and magical scenery! We look forward to more surprises waiting for us in the near future.