Other nebulae are regions where new stars are beginning to form. For this reason, some nebulae are called "star nurseries. These towers of cosmic dust and gas make up part of the Eagle Nebula. These so-called Pillars of Creation are part of an active star-forming region within the nebula. In this image of the Carina Nebula, you can spot tiny yellow and white dots inside pink dust clouds. Those tiny dots are newly-formed stars! Anthony Bouchard. Fascinated by scientific discoveries and media, Anthony found his way here at LabRoots, where he would be able to dabble in the two.
Anthony is a technology junkie that has vast experience in computer systems and automobile mechanics, as opposite as those sound. APR 17, Researchers from Arizona State University have suggested that two giant blobs of rock cupping the Earth's core are l Written By: Annie Lennon. MAY 01, Astrophysicists from the University of Minnesota have found evidence for the theory that small galaxies emitting high-en MAY 15, Researchers from the University of Tokyo have found that under certain extreme conditions, hydrogen particles can bond s Podcast video : Download Duration: — I do believe you mispoke about the length of time the eye can integrate photons from the sky.
It is 15 to 20 milliseconds or the inverse of the 24 frames per second which through persistence of vision allows old fashioned film movies to appear continous. If our eyes could integrate light from a single object for 15 seconds, the instant we moved our eye to something else moving about in the dark, say a bear, everything would be a blur. Would you say that an accurate translation from French to English was a lie simply because you had to read it in English and not its original language?
Or the surroundings of a black hole. Or the lake shores on Titan. The upper clouds of Venus where the temperatures are like in Florida. This list goes on and on… And yes, I totally agree with Paul Gracey. The eyes process around 25 pics per second. I agree with geckzilla, too. No human eye kann see this, but the pictures these instruments create are no lies.
Frasier, I generally enjoy your work and the great output of the Universe Today. Thanks for NOT being the tabloid journalists for astronomy and space topics. You owe NASA and all astrophotographers an apology. Most photos strive to provide a viewer with the closest possible substitute for the view from the site. So a portrait captures and renders the face of the subject to allow people in the future to enjoy the same sight as the camera. A photo of the Grand Canyon captures the colors, features, and shadows that surround the camera.
I hope you agree those photographs are not lies. However, a human and the Grand Canyon look very different in photos than in person. But a new image of the Helix Nebula provides a fascinating look at how these stunning pictures come together. The La Silla Observatory, located way out in Chile's Atacama Desert, captured this collection of raw images—a different detector captured each of the eight frames. It's beautiful in a rustic, minimalist kind of way.
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