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Jason Nishiyama @evilscientistca@octodon.social

The Apollo astronauts left laser retro-reflectors on the Moon which allowed us to measure the distance to the Moon to an accuracy of a few centimetres.

@edavies Yes, the stars create diffraction spikes!

The Virgo cluster of galaxies is one of countless large grouping of galaxies in the universe. Our own Galaxy is a member of the Virgo cluster. Rothney Astrophysical Observatory Baker-Nunn telescope mosaic.

@kmicu Though I'm more a fan of the astrophysical explanation in terms of coolness... 😉

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?

If what's left over after a supernova explosion is less than about 3.5 times the mass of the Sun it will be a neutron star. If it's larger than 3.5 solar masses it will become a black hole.

The arcs around the two galaxies in the centre of this Hubble image are caused by the light from galaxies behind the galaxy cluster in the centre being bent by the gravity of the cluster. This is gravitational lensing.

‪M17- the Omega or Swan Nebula is a star formation region about 5000ly from us. It glows red because the young stars excite the gas of the nebula.‬

mh(-) Show more

The ecliptic is the Sun's apparent path through the sky. The Sun's motion along the ecliptic is actually due to the Earth's orbit around the Sun. The 23° angle the ecliptic makes with the celestial equator is due to the Earth's axial tilt.

Open clusters of stars, such as M11 (The Wild Duck Cluster) are amazing labs for stellar evolution. Since the stars in the cluster were formed at roughly the same time one can work out how mass and stellar lifetime relate to one another. More massive stars live shorter lives.

M42- The Great Nebula in Orion, is a massive star formation region. It's also relatively close being in the 1400-1500 ly range of distance.

Planetary nebulae are generally round/elliptical or bipolar-butterfly shaped.
We don't know exactly what the collimation mechanism is for the bipolar PNe. (Left my image of M97, right Hubble image of M2-9)

@CobaltVelvet I think the issues with searches in any Linux GUI is that they are simply front ends for the find command which has its own idiosyncrasies...

Stars between about 1 times the mass of the Sun and 6-8 times the mass of the Sun end their days as a white dwarf after becoming a planetary nebula. Some planetary nebulae shown: Owl Nebula, Ring Nebula, and Dumbbell Nebula.

Stars with a mass greater than 8 times that of the Sun die spectacularly. Once the matter in their cores is fused in to iron, fusion shuts down and the star then explodes in a supernova explosion.
The Crab Nebula, shown, is the remnant of a supernova recorded in 1054 by Chinese astronomers.

‪The amount of energy recieved by the Earth from the Sun has increased about 1 W/m^2 over the past 1000 years. The average variance over the 11 year sunspot cycle is about 3 W/m^2. The average total amount is about 1300 W/m^2.‬

The f-ratio of a telescope (and camera lens) is the ratio of the focal length to the aperture. So a 2000mm focal length telescope with an aperture of 200mm would be an f10.