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Posted on Thursday, 16 May 2013.

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Posted on Wednesday, 15 May 2013.

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83,217 notes

Posted on Wednesday, 15 May 2013.

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54,291 notes

Posted on Wednesday, 15 May 2013.

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Posted on Wednesday, 15 May 2013.

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53,054 notes

Posted on Saturday, 11 May 2013.

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Posted on Thursday, 2 May 2013.

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darkenergydetectives:

Time to Meet the Neighbors!
Spiral Galaxy NGC 0895 was discovered by William Herschel in 1875. Herschel created the first maps of the Milky Way galaxy by observing and drawing the stars. Herschel also saw galaxies outside the Milky Way, but he didn’t know what they were, so he only referred to them generically as nebulae. That was the common term at the time for diffuse, extended objects – including actual nebulae, which are the gaseous remains of exploded stars.
Galaxy NGC 0895 is located in the constellation Cetus, about 110 million light years away – still a fraction (about 0.2 percent) of the observable universe. The star nearest to us, Alpha Centauri, is 4.3 light years away, and the nearest spiral galaxy, Andromeda, is 2.5 million light years away.
We can tell how many stars are forming by how blue the galaxy appears through the camera lens. Blue galaxies contain many young, newly formed stars. The golden object in the upper right is a redder galaxy, which has many more older red stars, and fewer still forming.
If you want to find NGC 0895 yourself, it is located at coordinates (RA 02 21 36.5, Dec -05 31 16).
This image was taken with the Dark Energy Camera, and shows us this galaxy in sharper detail than we have ever seen it. Check back here every Monday for another image and another story from the Dark Detectives at DES.
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Posted on Thursday, 2 May 2013.

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Posted on Wednesday, 1 May 2013.

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smithsonianmag:

Surreal Macro Photographs of Animal Eyes
Photographer Suren Manvelyan’s portfolio includes series on human and animal eyes. He is a talented landscape and portrait photographer as well. In 2001 he received his PhD in theoretical physics from Yerevan State University. Pictured is a closeup of a parrot eye.
Check out Twisted Sifter for more amazing photos and info on Manvelyan.
Ed note: The science behind Suren Manvelyan’s human eye photos.
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Posted on Tuesday, 30 April 2013.

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isobeldoesnails:

Harry Potter Day in school