Hubble Space Telescope via Twitter
Posted: Wed Jul 09, 2025 8:23 am
Its name is derived from the Old English word for “rising light” or “morning star.
In July , NASA showed off two new eye-catching photos from space taken by Hubble.
The arms of this spiral galaxy image, captured by Hubble, is what makes it eye-catching.
The spiral galaxy’s arms are comprised of young blue stars and pink star clusters that sit amid brown dust.
Plumes of turquoise gas
In the outskirts of the Tarantula Nebula, plumes of turquoise-colored hydrogen gas move from the upper left of the image to the bottom right. The background is peppered with distant stars, seen as red and blue dots. The brightest stars have plus-sign-shaped diffraction spikes.
Hubble Space Telescope via Twitter
The Hubble project recently shared this photo, showing plumes of turquoise hydrogen gas on the edge of the Tarantula Nebula.
It was captured using near-infrared light. The same photo is also available in both visible and ultraviolet light.
What is inside this nebula?
A nebula with a pink and blue pillow-shaped structure at a 45-degree angle in the middle, surrounded by round, concentric waves of blue gas, all set on a black star-filled background. The pillow shaped structure telegram database has vein-like filaments of dark red gas and dust and a small bright star in the middle.
Hubble Space Telescope via Twitter
In 1998, Hubble examined the planetary nebula known as NGC 7027.
It recently shared that in 2019, the planetary nebula was examined again, but in ultraviolet light for the first time.
“Ultraviolet observations provided a new look of the expanding shells of gas created by a dying central star,” the Hubble project tweeted.
“Raindrops” in space
Bright light blue covers most of the image. What appear to be raindrops start toward the top of the image, shown in light orange-pink, and trail down the scene, which is a clip of a larger image of the Helix Nebula.
In July , NASA showed off two new eye-catching photos from space taken by Hubble.
The arms of this spiral galaxy image, captured by Hubble, is what makes it eye-catching.
The spiral galaxy’s arms are comprised of young blue stars and pink star clusters that sit amid brown dust.
Plumes of turquoise gas
In the outskirts of the Tarantula Nebula, plumes of turquoise-colored hydrogen gas move from the upper left of the image to the bottom right. The background is peppered with distant stars, seen as red and blue dots. The brightest stars have plus-sign-shaped diffraction spikes.
Hubble Space Telescope via Twitter
The Hubble project recently shared this photo, showing plumes of turquoise hydrogen gas on the edge of the Tarantula Nebula.
It was captured using near-infrared light. The same photo is also available in both visible and ultraviolet light.
What is inside this nebula?
A nebula with a pink and blue pillow-shaped structure at a 45-degree angle in the middle, surrounded by round, concentric waves of blue gas, all set on a black star-filled background. The pillow shaped structure telegram database has vein-like filaments of dark red gas and dust and a small bright star in the middle.
Hubble Space Telescope via Twitter
In 1998, Hubble examined the planetary nebula known as NGC 7027.
It recently shared that in 2019, the planetary nebula was examined again, but in ultraviolet light for the first time.
“Ultraviolet observations provided a new look of the expanding shells of gas created by a dying central star,” the Hubble project tweeted.
“Raindrops” in space
Bright light blue covers most of the image. What appear to be raindrops start toward the top of the image, shown in light orange-pink, and trail down the scene, which is a clip of a larger image of the Helix Nebula.