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This is the Hubble extreme deep field. With the exception of (from what I can find) 3 foreground stars, every object you see in this picture is a galaxy. Can you find the foreground stars? Know the trick?

@evilscientistca I don't know, but i would guess that the image has been colour adjusted for red shift, since stars are near they will have been shifted further into the blue part of the spectrum. So, look for the three bluest or indigo objects?

@StuC @evilscientistca

Red-/blue-shift refers to the Doppler shift in the absorption/emission lines in the spectrum, not the color of the objects. The color of stars (galaxy color is in large part due to the composite color of all contained stars) is largely due to temperature. Red stars are cooler while blue stars are hotter.

Robert Walker’s answer in this thread gives a thorough rundown of star colors in this thread: quora.com/If-a-distant-star-is

@paanvaannd @StuC @evilscientistca My guess - Stars have diffraction effects from the secondary mirror spider assembly, due to being point sources of light compared to galaxies.