This is Comet PanSTARRS! 🌠🌠🌠
This gif was created throughout the night of July 25th and you can see the potentially interstellar comet in motion.
Taken by me (Michelle Park) using the Slooh Canary One telescope on July 25th, 2022.
late night study vibes ✦
w/ music
my shop
This is the Tarantula Nebula! 🌈🌈🌈
For some reason, this photo really highlighted the red and blue colors of this nebula - making it look a lot more colorful. This huge star-forming region is located in our satellite galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud, and has hot gas up to a million degrees in temperature that shape this nebula! ✨✨✨
Taken by me (Michelle Park) using the Slooh Canary Two telescope on December 23rd, 2020 at 2:57 UTC.
This is the Dumbbell Nebula! ⏳⏳⏳
Similar to many other planetary nebulae, the Dumbbell Nebula has a pattern of dark and bright knots made of gas and dust. These beautiful, ornate features are formed when stellar winds don’t fully blow away the nebula’s material and they leave a trail behind! 💘💘💘
Taken by me (Michelle Park) using the Slooh Canary Two telescope on October 17th, 2021 at 00:00 UTC.
am supposed to write a few lines so people at uni can ~gET tO knOw Me~ and the pressure is. on.
like do i make myself look cool to get some friends or do i tell them about the loser i really am??
Better late than never!
Here’s a spooky comic on Strange Stars!
https://www.popularmechanics.com/space/a23943/theoretical-strange-stars-weirdest-objects-universe/
This is Comet Pan-STARRS! 🌠🌠🌠
This comet took millions of years to arrive from the Oort Cloud. Its unusual brightness, which allowed it to be visible even in 2013, and its hyperbolic orbit show that the comet could potentially have interstellar origins! 💫💫💫
Taken by me (Michelle Park) using the Slooh Canary Two telescope on July 21st, 2022.
This is the Pleiades! 💫💫💫
This stunning cluster is the nearest object in the Messier catalog to Earth and is easily visible in the night sky. Each of these stars are almost 40 times brighter than our Sun and are surrounded by a reflection nebula! 🌞🌞🌞
Taken by me (Michelle Park) using the Slooh Canary Two telescope on October 22nd, 2020 at 22:56 UTC.
This is the Eagle Nebula! 🦅🦅🦅
This young cluster of stars and the distinct Pillars of Creation at the center of the nebula are located in the constellation of Serpens. These stars, which were formed in the HII region of this nebula, are very massive: some of them are up to 1 million solar luminosities! ✨✨✨
Taken by me (Michelle Park) using the Slooh Canary Two telescope on May 9th, 2021 at 00:36 UTC.