Z Wikipédie
[edit] Summary
Description |
This infrared composite image from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope shows the Andromeda galaxy, a neighbor to our Milky Way galaxy. The image highlights the contrast between the galaxy's choppy waves of dust (red) and smooth sea of older stars (blue). Spiral galaxies tend to form new stars in their dusty, clumpy arms, while their cores are populated by older stars. The Spitzer view also shows Andromeda's dust lanes twisting all the way into the center of the galaxy, a region that is crammed full of stars. In visible-light pictures, this central region tends to be dominated by starlight.
|
Source |
http://www.spitzer.caltech.edu/Media/releases/ssc2006-14/ssc2006-14a.shtml
|
Date |
2006 June 05 (Release Date)
|
Author |
NASA/JPL-Caltech/P. Barmby (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics)
|
Permission |
Unless otherwise noted, images and video on Spitzer public web sites (public sites ending with a spitzer.caltech.edu address) may be used for any purpose without prior permission [1]
|
[edit] Licensing
Odkazy na obrázok
Na tento obrázok odkazujú nasledujúce články:
Tento súbor obsahuje ďalšie informácie, pravdepodobne pochádzajúce z digitálneho fotoaparátu či scannera ktorý ho vytvoril alebo digitalizoval. Ak bol súbor zmenený, niektoré podrobnosti sa nemusia plne zhodovať so zmeneným obrázkom.