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NASA never stops surprising us with stunning images from outer space. In a new Instagram post, the space agency has released a new photo of Milky Way on October 19. The colourful image is a panorama of the Milky Way’s galactic centre. NASA mentions that by “combining observations from across the electromagnetic spectrum,” it has been able to reveal the “presence of intertwined threads of energy up to 20 light-years long.” The space agency added that “learning more about these threads may help us study space weather, like the solar wind that blows through our solar system, and better understand the cosmic tapestry of the Milky Way’s core.”

NASA’s various observatories keep capturing amazing photos of space primarily for research and study. The latest image of Milky Way was taken by NASA’s orbiting Chandra X-ray Observatory and the MeerKAT radio telescope in South Africa.

The photo shows a burst of colourful clouds and clusters of stars. NASA explains the magical colours in the photo. “The orange, green, blue and purple areas of this image correspond to different levels of X-ray energy,” the caption read.

The subtle lilac and grey tones were caused because of other reasons. The caption explained that the “radio waves (were) shown in lilac and grey.” Radiowaves have a lower frequency and longer wavelengths than X-rays, hence they show different colours on the picture.

Here’s the image:

Earlier in July, NASA had shared another stunning image of a galaxy called M77, and also explained how it has been “shaped.” In the post, NASA also explained the role played by magnetic fields in shaping various galaxies.

In another post in June, the American space agency shared a photograph of two swirling galaxies merging in a galactic system 140 million light-years from Earth. In the caption, NASA mentioned that “as these two become one, shock waves rumble through both galaxies and trigger waves of new star formation.”


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Massive Fireball Streaks Across Southern Japan, Lighting Up the Night Sky

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On Aug. 19, residents of southern Japan witnessed a brilliant fireball streaking across the night sky, lighting up cities from Kagoshima to Osaka. The meteor appeared at 11:08 p.m. local time, glowing green-blue with flashes so bright they rivaled the moon before bursting into orange-red fragments above the Pacific Ocean. Security and dashcam cameras captured the dazz…

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Ursa Major III May Be a Star Cluster, Not a Dark-Matter Dwarf Galaxy

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Astronomers have long thought Ursa Major III, also called UNIONS 1, was a dark-matter-packed dwarf galaxy. But new simulations suggest it may instead be a compact star cluster bound by black holes and neutron stars. Located 30,000 light-years away, Ursa Major III contains just ~60 visible stars yet shows puzzlingly high stellar velocities. The new analysis explains th…

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James Webb Telescope Discovers Tiny New Moon Orbiting Uranus

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A team from the Southwest Research Institute has discovered a tiny new moon orbiting Uranus using NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. The moon, called S/2025 U1, is just 6 miles (10 kilometers) wide, too small for Voyager 2 to detect during its 1986 flyby. This discovery brings Uranus’s total known moons to 29, with S/2025 U1 orbiting 35,000 miles from the planet…

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