• Sometimes you just sense a certain kind of light in someone – not the dazzling kind, but something quiet and deep, like starlight through a distant nebula. It makes you pause and wonder about the worlds they carry within them. And if maybe, just maybe, they feel a similar pull. Queen Marika from Elden Ring by mi_samura
    Sometimes you just sense a certain kind of light in someone – not the dazzling kind, but something quiet and deep, like starlight through a distant nebula. ✨🌌 It makes you pause and wonder about the worlds they carry within them. And if maybe, just maybe, they feel a similar pull. 💫Queen Marika from Elden Ring by mi_samura
    Like
    Love
    Wow
    3
    · 0 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·66K Views ·0 Anteprima
  • When You Look at Orion, You're Watching the Life Cycle of Stars Unfold in Real Time

    It begins with Betelgeuse — the fiery red giant blazing at Orion’s shoulder. Enormous and unstable, it's nearing the end of its life. Within the next 100,000 years, it will explode in a brilliant supernova, briefly outshining the Moon and turning night into day.

    Next, your eyes are drawn to Orion’s Belt — three iconic stars in perfect alignment: Alnitak, Alnilam, and Mintaka. These massive suns are younger than Betelgeuse but destined for the same fate — to burn out and collapse into stellar remnants.

    And just below them lies the Orion Nebula (M42) — a breathtaking cradle of creation. Here, clouds of gas and dust are actively forming newborn stars, giving rise to the next generation of cosmic giants.

    In one glance, Orion tells a timeless story — of stars that are dying, stars in their prime, and stars just beginning to shine. It's not just a constellation; it's a living timeline, stretching millions of years across the sky.

    We’re not just stargazing — we’re witnessing the universe in motion.
    Background image credit: Akira Fujii�
    When You Look at Orion, You're Watching the Life Cycle of Stars Unfold in Real Time It begins with Betelgeuse — the fiery red giant blazing at Orion’s shoulder. Enormous and unstable, it's nearing the end of its life. Within the next 100,000 years, it will explode in a brilliant supernova, briefly outshining the Moon and turning night into day. Next, your eyes are drawn to Orion’s Belt — three iconic stars in perfect alignment: Alnitak, Alnilam, and Mintaka. These massive suns are younger than Betelgeuse but destined for the same fate — to burn out and collapse into stellar remnants. And just below them lies the Orion Nebula (M42) — a breathtaking cradle of creation. Here, clouds of gas and dust are actively forming newborn stars, giving rise to the next generation of cosmic giants. In one glance, Orion tells a timeless story — of stars that are dying, stars in their prime, and stars just beginning to shine. It's not just a constellation; it's a living timeline, stretching millions of years across the sky. We’re not just stargazing — we’re witnessing the universe in motion. Background image credit: Akira Fujii�
    0 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·25K Views ·0 Anteprima
  • Beautiful Wonder Woman
    Cosplayer: @astravoidcosplay
    Photographer: @darknebula0811
    suit is not from us

    #wonderwoma #wonderwomancosplay #wonderwoman1984 #womenofcosplay #dccosplay #cosplaygirl
    Beautiful Wonder Woman Cosplayer: @astravoidcosplay Photographer: @darknebula0811 suit is not from us #wonderwoma #wonderwomancosplay #wonderwoman1984 #womenofcosplay #dccosplay #cosplaygirl
    0 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·25K Views ·0 Anteprima
  • From blurry light to a galaxy of stars.

    In 1899, Isaac Roberts captured what he called the “Great Andromeda Nebula.” At the time, it was believed to be just a cloud of gas within our own galaxy.

    Years later, it was revealed to be something far more astonishing — the Andromeda Galaxy, a vast island of stars 2.5 million light-years away.
    What was once a mystery in the lens became a milestone in our understanding of the universe.

    #Andromeda #Galaxy #Astrophotography #SpaceHistory #Nebula #Universe
    From blurry light to a galaxy of stars. In 1899, Isaac Roberts captured what he called the “Great Andromeda Nebula.” At the time, it was believed to be just a cloud of gas within our own galaxy. Years later, it was revealed to be something far more astonishing — the Andromeda Galaxy, a vast island of stars 2.5 million light-years away. What was once a mystery in the lens became a milestone in our understanding of the universe. #Andromeda #Galaxy #Astrophotography #SpaceHistory #Nebula #Universe
    0 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·20K Views ·0 Anteprima
  • Astronomers may have just found one of the youngest neutron stars ever—possibly only 14 years old.

    Discovered in a dwarf galaxy 400 million light-years away, the object—VT 1137–0337—was spotted during the Very Large Array Sky Survey. It wasn’t visible in 1998 data but lit up with strong radio signals by 2018, suggesting it formed sometime in between.

    What makes this find special? Its radio signal is 10,000 times brighter than the famous Crab Nebula. Scientists think it’s a newborn pulsar wind nebula—powered by a rapidly spinning neutron star—and it may even be evolving into a magnetar, one of the universe’s most magnetic and mysterious objects.

    This rare discovery gives us a glimpse into how neutron stars and magnetars form—and how they might be connected to fast radio bursts.

    Source: Dong & Hallinan, The Astrophysical Journal (2023)
    Astronomers may have just found one of the youngest neutron stars ever—possibly only 14 years old. Discovered in a dwarf galaxy 400 million light-years away, the object—VT 1137–0337—was spotted during the Very Large Array Sky Survey. It wasn’t visible in 1998 data but lit up with strong radio signals by 2018, suggesting it formed sometime in between. What makes this find special? Its radio signal is 10,000 times brighter than the famous Crab Nebula. Scientists think it’s a newborn pulsar wind nebula—powered by a rapidly spinning neutron star—and it may even be evolving into a magnetar, one of the universe’s most magnetic and mysterious objects. This rare discovery gives us a glimpse into how neutron stars and magnetars form—and how they might be connected to fast radio bursts. Source: Dong & Hallinan, The Astrophysical Journal (2023)
    0 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·20K Views ·0 Anteprima
Pagine in Evidenza