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Stellar Nursery
Image by Stephen Mounioloux, Your Shot
This cluster of primary colors is the Trifid Nebula—nicknamed the "star factory"—which sits in the Sagittarius constellation. Submitted to National Geographic's My Shot photo community on August 1, the colorful composition is also one of National Geographic's favorite space pictures this week.
Trifid actually comprises three kinds of nebulae—great clouds of interstellar gas and dust.
The "reflection nebula" at left scatters blue light from nearby stars. To the right, infant stars jammed in the center of Trifid heat surrounding gas, whose high hydrogen content explains the reddish glow. Finally, the star factory is cross-crossed by slender, light-obscuring "dark nebulae."
(See more nebula pictures.)
—Kastalia Medrano
Published August 3, 2012
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Light Show
Image courtesy SDO/NASA
Thin ribbons of plasma and magnetic lines burst from the sun in a still from a video taken by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) on July 23 and 24.
About one-third of the sun showed signs of activity when the video was taken, according to the SDO team. Stretching from one active region to another, magnetic field lines cause the looping formations.
(See "Solar Flare: What If Biggest Known Sun Storm Hit Today?")
Published August 3, 2012
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Purple Rain
Photograph by Tamas Ladanyi, TWAN
Star trails—the results of a long exposure and Earth's rotation—illuminate the night sky over Hungary's Szazhalombatta Archaeological Park in a picture recently submitted to the astronomy-education project The World at Night (TWAN).
Spectacular views of stars and other celestial phenomena are common from the park, which recreates prehistoric village life. The grassy mound at left is an Iron Age burial ground, while the house on the right is modeled after a Bronze Age dwelling.
(See "Best Night-Sky Pictures of 2012 Named.")
Published August 3, 2012
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X-Ray Vision
Image courtesy K. Long et al, CXC/STScI/NASA
The spiral galaxy M83 resembles a massive pinwheel in one of the deepest ever x-ray pictures of a galaxy other than our own Milky Way.
Released July 30 by NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, the image shows x-ray emissions with low (red), medium (green), and high (blue) energy.
(See "Pictures: New Proof Spiral Galaxies Eat, Digest Dwarfs.")
Published August 3, 2012
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Trail Blazer
Image courtesy T.A. Rector and H. Schweiker, U.A.Anchorage/WIYN/NOAO/NSF
Meet HFG1, a planetary nebula on the move—as seen in a recent picture from Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona.
The star system that caused the nebula to form, V664 Cas, is moving so rapidly that it creates a bow shock, the blue arc of displaced matter at upper right. The red swath behind is residue from gases in the system.
(See "Hyperspeed Planets Are Hurtling Out of the Milky Way?")
Published August 3, 2012
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Next: More Great Space Pictures
Image courtesy J. Allen and R. Simmon, ASTER/METI/ERSDA/JAROS/NASA
Published August 3, 2012
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