Bump because I love space
I really, REALLY hope that the red dwarf orbiting the sun is real.
i like this
>>2570631
Sadly they don't exist anymore!
>>2568805
Space is like the best thing ever
And we are the universe within so that's cool
>>2568203
Ohfuckyes.png
Now I can contribute!
>>2571153
>>2571155
Fictional, yes, but I like it nonetheless
>>2571157
Still looking for some others that are of a decent resolution
>>2571162
And still the question remains....is this kind of shit on topic?
>>2571165
Huh. Looks like I'm out.
Time to lurk and download more.
I have few.
>>2571312
>>2571313
Tulip nebula
>>2571315
>>2571316
>>2571318
>>2571319
Little break now. will post more if someone wants/needs.
>>2571320
Definitely. I will come back after work to check up on this thread. I like what you posted.
>>2571320
>>2571365
>>2571374
>>2571376
>>2571377
>>2571380
>>2571389
>>2571391
>>2571392
captcha thinks im a robot. im not. human flesh is what i ea ... i am.
>>2571395
saved. Nice work.
>>2571397
>>2571401
>>2571402
Not outer space. And little break now.
>>2571408
the same here.
Btw, can anyone explain me the green shadow on the right side of the moon. I get that is due to the photography technique, but I'd like to know how it works exactly.
>>2571438
From APOD (where i got that image)
>Explanation: The Moon was new on July 16. Its familiar nearside facing the surface of planet Earth was in shadow. But on that date a million miles away, the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) spacecraft's Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC) captured this view of an apparently Full Moon crossing in front of a Full Earth. In fact, seen from the spacecraft's position beyond the Moon's orbit and between Earth and Sun, the fully illuminated lunar hemisphere is the less familiar farside. Only known since the dawn of the space age, the farside is mostly devoid of dark lunar maria that sprawl across the Moon's perpetual Earth-facing hemisphere. Only the small dark spot of the farside's Mare Moscoviense (Sea of Moscow) is clear, at the upper left. Planet Earth's north pole is near 11 o'clock, with the North America visited by Hurricane Dolores near center. Slight color shifts are visible around the lunar edge, an artifact of the Moon's motion through the field caused by combining the camera's separate exposures taken in quick succession through different color filters. While monitoring the Earth and solar wind for space weather forcasts, about twice a year DSCOVR can capture similar images of Moon and Earth together as it crosses the orbital plane of the Moon.
>>2571445
>>2571460
>>2571461
it's 2 am, pillow calling.
>>2571445
thanks
>>2571464
from APOD:
> It is a candidate for the brightest and most powerful explosion ever seen -- what is it? The flaring spot of light was found by the All Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASASSN) in June of last year and labelled ASASSN-15lh. Located about three billion light years distant, the source appears tremendously bright for anything so far away: roughly 200 times brighter than an average supernova, and temporarily 20 times brighter than all of the stars in our Milky Way Galaxy combined. Were light emitted by ASASSN-15lh at this rate in all directions at once, it would be the most powerful explosion yet recorded. No known stellar object was thought to create an explosion this powerful, although pushing the theoretical limits for the spin-down of highly-magnetized neutron star -- a magnetar -- gets close. Assuming the flare fades as expected later this year, astronomers are planning to use telescopes including Hubble to zoom in on the region to gain more clues. The above-featured artist's illustration depicts a hypothetical night sky of a planet located across the host galaxy from the outburst.
Ghost Nebula.
>>2570631
>>2571461
it's /hr, /hr calling!
http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/
most of these are huge size
mork calling orson
>>2571374
so beautiful
>>2582496
This is now my phone's background
>>2568204
Fucking Mysterons