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Stunning Views

Logo of telegram channel stunningpics — Stunning Views S
Logo of telegram channel stunningpics — Stunning Views
Channel address: @stunningpics
Categories: Uncategorized
Language: English
Subscribers: 6
Description from channel

Milky Way, Night Sky

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The latest Messages

2016-04-26 22:52:46
RT @astro_tim: #Moonset. @Space_Station #Explore https://t.co/bCqOH6qzLh
18 views19:52
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2016-04-24 15:34:44 Milky Way in Moonlight\n\nhttp://apod.nasa.gov/image/1604/TafreshiOman_MG_7051s.jpg
340 views12:34
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2016-04-17 23:50:24 List of all spacecrafts ever launched

http://claudelafleur.qc.ca/Spacecrafts-master.html
271 views20:50
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2016-04-16 17:52:08
261 views14:52
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2016-04-15 00:50:46 Close Comet and the Milky Way

Comet 252P/Linear's lovely greenish coma is easy to spot in this expansive southern skyscape. Visible to the naked eye from the dark site near Flinders, Victoria, Australia, the comet appears tailless. Still, its surprisingly bright coma spans about 1 degree, posed here below the nebulae, stars, and dark rifts of the Milky Way. The five panels used in the wide-field mosaic were captured after moonset and before morning twilight on March 21. That was less than 24 hours from the comet's closest approach, a mere 5.3 million kilometers from our fair planet. Sweeping quickly across the sky because it is so close to Earth, the comet should be spotted in the coming days by northern hemisphere comet watchers. In predawn but moonlit skies it will move through Sagittarius and Scorpius seen toward the southern horizon. That's near the triangle formed by bright, yellowish, Mars, Saturn, and Antares at the upper left of this frame.
11 views21:50
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2016-04-15 00:48:57
228 views21:48
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2016-03-20 17:46:23 The W in Cassiopeia

A familiar, zigzag, W pattern in northern constellation Cassiopeia is traced by five bright stars in this colorful and broad mosaic. Stretching about 15 degrees across rich starfields, the celestial scene includes dark clouds, bright nebulae, and star clusters along the Milky Way. In yellow-orange hues Cassiopeia's alpha star Shedar is a standout though. The yellowish giant star is cooler than the Sun, over 40 times the solar diameter, and so luminous it shines brightly in Earth's night from 230 light-years away. A massive, rapidly rotating star at the center of the W, bright Gamma Cas is about 550 light-years distant. Bluish Gamma Cas is much hotter than the Sun. Its intense, invisible ultraviolet radiation ionizes hydrogen atoms in nearby interstellar clouds to produce visible red H-alpha emission as the atoms recombine with electrons. Of course, night skygazers in the Alpha Centauri star system would also see the recognizable outline traced by Cassiopeia's bright stars. But from their perspective a mere 4.3 light-years away they would see our Sun as a sixth bright star in Cassiopeia, extending the zigzag pattern just beyond the left edge of this frame.
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2016-03-19 17:53:10
156 views14:53
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2016-03-19 17:52:16
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2016-03-19 17:51:04
139 views14:51
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