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Photos

Showing 91 - 108 of 12,543 results

1264463230
531666145
171143861
96615107
482708005
183048118
Galactic Tranquility
967105184
476869683
1301153296

1264463230

Adult whale breaching out of the water. Half of it's body is out of the water. Both pectoral fins are raised. The head is at the highest point, as it is jumping out of the water. breath vapour is visible.

Photo By: Marnie Griffiths

531666145

Darvaza craeter called Hell's gate

Photo By: Sergio Del Rosso Photography

Atractus zgap was found in an orchard of small school in the Andean town El Chaco, Napo province, Ecuador.

Photo By: Alejandro Arteaga

171143861

Octopus with starfish

Photo By: fjdelvalle

Biologist Alejandro Arteaga examines the holotype of Atractus discovery. He had to examine hundreds of museum specimens before confirming the new species as such.

Photo By: Alejandro Arteaga

Alejandro Arteaga holds an Atractus zgap.

Photo By: Alejandro Arteaga

96615107

UK

Photo By: Monty Rakusen

482708005

Norway Viking boat

Photo By: LMGPhotos

Astronomers using ground-based observatories caught the progression of a cosmic event nicknamed "the Cow," as seen in the three images.

Photo By: Daniel Perley, Liverpool John Moores University

183048118

Autumn decoration in brown - selective focus

Photo By: Moncherie

Located about 200 million light-years away from Earth in the constellation Hercules.

Photo By: Sloan Digital Sky Survey

AT2018cow erupted in or near a galaxy known as CGCG 137-068.

Photo By: Sloan Digital Sky Survey

This artist's conception shows the relative size of a hypothetical brown dwarf-planetary system compared to our own solar system. A brown dwarf is a cool or "failed" star, which lacks the mass to ignite and shine like our Sun. NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope set its infrared eyes on an extraordinarily low-mass brown dwarf called OTS 44 and found a swirling disk of planet-building dust. At only 15 times the mass of Jupiter, OTS 44 is the smallest known brown dwarf to host a planet-forming, or protoplanetary, disk.

Photo By: NASA/JPL-Caltech/T. Pyle (SSC)

Galactic Tranquility

The lazily winding spiral arms of the spectacular galaxy NGC 976 fill the frame of this image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. This spiral galaxy lies around 150 million light-years from the Milky Way in the constellation Aries. Despite its tranquil appearance, NGC 976 has played host to one of the most violent astronomical phenomena known — a supernova explosion. These cataclysmicly violent events take place at the end of the lives of massive stars, and can outshine entire galaxies for a short period. While supernovae mark the deaths of massive stars, they are also responsible for the creation of heavy elements that are incorporated into later generations of stars and planets. Supernovae are also a useful aid for astronomers who measure the distances to faraway galaxies. The amount of energy thrown out into space by supernova explosions is very uniform, allowing astronomers to estimate their distances from how bright they appear to be when viewed from Earth. This image — which was created using data from Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 — comes from a large collection of Hubble observations of nearby galaxies which host supernovae as well as a pulsating class of stars known as Cepheid variables. Both Cepheids and supernovae are used to measure astronomical distances, and galaxies containing both objects provide useful natural laboratories where the two methods can be calibrated against one another.

Photo By: ESA/Hubble & NASA, D. Jones, A. Riess et al.

967105184

airplane flying over the national flags

Photo By: honglouwawa

476869683

The extensive Gum Nebula area in the constellation Vela, an interstellar bubble blown by winds from hot stars, with the False Cross at left. Star clusters NGC 2516 (below False Cross) and IC 2391 (right of false Cross) stand out. Superhot star Gamma Velorum is at center.

Photo By: Alan Dyer/Stocktrek Images

Photo By: NASA, JPL-Caltech, GALEX, C. Martin (Caltech), M. Seibert (OCIW)

1301153296

Drone point of view of a single lane road passing next to a coast.

Photo By: Nazar Abbas Photography

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