Astrophotography Gallery

Galaxies & Nebulae

Galaxies & Nebula
Whirlpool Galaxy
The Whirlpool Galaxy is named for its sweeping spiral arms. In 1773, Charles Messier observed the galaxy and added it to his catalog of deep-sky objects as M 51. Located in the constellation Canes Venatici, it is 23 million light years from Earth. The Whirlpool Galaxy is 100 billion stars all rotating together. It’s a spiral galaxy with a central bulge of stars and arms of stars, dust and gases. The smaller galaxy to the right of the Whirlpool Galaxy is NGC 5194. It is sliding past the Whirlpool Galaxy and interacting with its spiral arms. Within those arms, new stars are constantly being formed. Those new stars give the Whirlpool Galaxy its striking blue color.
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Zodiac Collection

GEMINI - Jellyfish Nebula
Gemini May 21 - Jun 20. Several thousand years ago a neutron star exploded. The remnants of that supernova formed the Jellyfish Nebula. The Jellyfish Nebula is 5000 light years from Earth in the constellation Gemini. A dim nebula, it was first discovered in astrophotographs by Maximillian Wolf in 1892.
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