Red hot nickel ball in champagne and RHNB-Stack of CD’s winner! Congrats to-... Read More إقرأ المزيد | Share it now!
Racing and Chasing – What To Watch
Need For Speed will be out soon, but there’s a lot of FAST CARS already STREAMING NOW!!! Subscribe for more W2W updates every THURSDAY!! – http://goo.gl/9AGRm... Read More إقرأ المزيد | Share it now!
Tweaks Coffee! – South Park: The Stick of Truth is AWESOME! – Part 7
PLAYLIST: http://bit.ly/1hMuNJJ NEXT PART: http://bit.ly/1gWeBmI... Read More إقرأ المزيد | Share it now!
Star Clusters in Collision
The dense star cluster called R136 is located within the Tarantula Nebula (also known as 30 Doradus), a giant star-forming region in a nearby dwarf galaxy. Astronomers suspect that the multiple clumps of stars within R136 are actually a pair of interacting star clusters. Supporting evidence for this idea comes from the large number of “runaway stars” — stars moving with unusually high velocity — that have been found within the nebula. A single, large star cluster would not produce as many runaway stars as two smaller interacting star clusters. In addition, some of these runaway stars are older than the estimated age of R136.... Read More إقرأ المزيد | Share it now!
Across the Universe: Hubble Ultra Deep Field
The Hubble Ultra Deep Field (HUDF) peers deeper into the universe than any previous visible-light image. Multiple observations of the same small patch of sky were combined for an equivalent exposure time of more than 11 days. Revealed within the image are thousands of galaxies located many billions of light-years away. Many of these galaxies are too small and too faint to be otherwise seen. Most importantly, because the light from distant galaxies requires billions of years to cross the intervening space, astronomers get to see them as they were billions of years ago. Much of the history of galaxy development can be found within the HUDF image.... Read More إقرأ المزيد | Share it now!
Star Clusters in Collision
The dense star cluster called R136 is located within the Tarantula Nebula (also known as 30 Doradus), a giant star-forming Continue reading
Across the Universe: Hubble Ultra Deep Field
The Hubble Ultra Deep Field (HUDF) peers deeper into the universe than any previous visible-light image. Multiple observations of the Continue reading
Active Galaxy Hercules A: Visible & Radio Comparison
The active galaxy Hercules A was given that name because it is the brightest radio source in the constellation of Hercules. Astronomers found that the double-peaked radio emission corresponded to a giant elliptical galaxy cataloged as 3C 348. Unusually, this behemoth galaxy is not found within a large cluster of hundreds of galaxies, but rather within a comparatively small group of dozens of galaxies. The ‘active’ part of the galaxy is the supermassive black hole in its core, which spews out strong jets of energetic particles that produce enormous lobes of radio emission. Some astronomers suspect that Hercules A may be the result of two galaxies merging together.... Read More إقرأ المزيد | Share it now!
Moon Shadows on Saturn
Saturn’s wide, but very thin, rings are tilted with respect to its plane of orbit around the Sun. Once every 15 years, the rings are edge-on (perpendicular) to the Sun. During those times, some of Saturn’s moons can cast shadows across the rings.... Read More إقرأ المزيد | Share it now!