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Starry skull! NASA shares hair-raising images of the Rosette Nebula taken by Chandra Observatory


NASA recently shared an image of the Rosette Nebula, which at first glance resembles a human skull! Check out details here.

Have you ever seen a starry image resembling a human skull? If not, here’s your chance. NASA has shared an image on its Instagram account showing part of the Rosette Nebula, which at first glance resembles a skull. The Rosette Nebula is known for its rosette arrangement and is located about 5000 light-years from Earth. Share photos NASA wrote“While this starry image may initially resemble a skull, it is no more than a visual trick. In fact, this composite image @nasachandraxray (Chandra X-ray Observatory) shows part of it. of the Rosette Nebula, named for its rosette arrangement, located about 5,000 light-years from Earth.”

NASA said, “A colorful skull-like star cluster in space. Red X-ray observations reveal hundreds of young stars near the center of the image. Large, densely colored air pockets. purple, orange, green and blue interspersed with dust forming the skeletal structure of this cosmic skull. In the skull’s eye sockets, bright blue stars stand out in the darkness of space.”

“The dust and gas that make up the visible bone structure is denser in the lower right of the image, creating a thick veil that blocks the view of new stars forming in the region. Upper corners. The bottom of the image shows the black background of space with stars sprinkled everywhere,” it added.

Data from Chandra shows that hundreds of young stars are concentrated in the center of the image and other clusters are fainter on the sides. “Observations from the Digital Sky Survey and @KittPeakObservatory reveal the stars lurking inside this fragile cosmic rosebud,” the research organization said.

These super-hot stars, known as O stars, have blown away layers of dust and gas with their radiation and strong winds, revealing a cooler dust chamber. Some of Rosette’s O stars can be seen in the bubble-like cavity; however, the two largest stars in this image are not in the nebula itself.

Chandra’s recent observations have revealed that Rosette’s darker region is a nursery for new stars to form. In the dense molecule cloud making up the “jaw” of this skull-like arrangement, hundreds of newly born stars are wrapped beneath a veil of gas.


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