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In these grim times, we all need a bit of an escape – so how about travelling far from Earth, through both space and time? Thanks to a little widget by NASA, you can now find out what the venerable Hubble Space Telescope, currently celebrating its 30th anniversary, saw on your birthday. All you need to do is type in your birth month and day, and an unquestionably gorgeous shot of something out there in the cosmos will pop up. On my birthday, albeit not taken in the year of my birth because (sigh) I’m a bit older than 30, Hubble took a shot of NGC 3982, a spiral galaxy 68 million light-years away.
Hubble-V Nebula Hubble-V is an active star-forming region within galaxy NGC 6822. The cloud is about 200 light-years across and contains a dense knot of dozens of ultra-hot stars, each 100,000 times brighter than our Sun.
On February 9 in 2014
Monkey Head Nebula
This image reveals carved knots of gas and dust in a small portion of the Monkey Head Nebula. The nebula is a star-forming region that hosts dusky dust clouds silhouetted against glowing gas.
An enormous bubble is being blown into space by a super-hot, massive star. The Bubble Nebula is roughly seven light-years across and is located 7,100 light-years away in the constellation Cassiopeia.
Galaxy Cluster RDCS 1252.9-2927 This image captures the massive galaxy clutser RDCS 1252.9-2927. The galaxies in the cluster already existed when the universe was just 5 billion years old, or about 35 percent of its present age.
originally posted by: Wide-Eyes
a reply to: AnonyMason
Yours is the same as my Mrs'.