Messier 77 also known as Cetus A, discovered 240 years ago by Pierre Mechain was then thought as a Nebula. Charles Messier and William Herchel later
Category: One-Minute Reads
Spectacular Clusters In One Frame
Are you a stargazer? Have you fixed your eyes on a strange patch of the sky and ever felt that it was becoming different after
Methane Tracker- A tool to reduce greenhouse gases
Global warming and associated climatic changes seem to be a daunting challenge for environmentalists, scientists as well as climate change enthusiasts. Among the different sources
Finally, Perseverance Got Its Real Wheels & Air Brakes
Like a Baby undergoing gestation period inside the safety wall of its mother’s womb before birth, our baby rover, Perseverance is gaining its fully developed body before
NGC 1672: Barred Spiral Galaxy from Hubble
When Galileo first looked at the sky through the telescope he saw a milky band of light. He named them as galaxies. Now we know
Gorgeous Ghost of Eagle Nebula
This is the image of the Eagle nebula’ s Pillars of creation taken by the Hubble space telescope in the infrared. The Eagle nebula is also known
Majestic Look Of Our Galactic Center
What’s the colour of the centre of our galaxy..? In what colour does it glow?? Green?? Blue?? Yellow?? Orange?? Or Red?? Oh no, it’s not
“Star Shredding Monstrous Black Hole”
What happens to a star that goes near a black hole? The gravitational pull starts to tear apart the star. The majority of star’s debris being
Hubble Captures a Cannibal Galaxy
Look at that picture, how majestic isn’t it… let us introduce you to the awe-inspiring spiral galaxy, the Cannibal galaxy…Cannibal? Yes, Cannibal, most of you
Image Showing Birth of Massive Star in Rosette?
Hey Buddies, Have you ever seen the birth of a baby star? If not, come and see this image taken by Herschel Space Observatory. Its the
Roving through the Rings- Cassini-Huygen
Ever dreamt of flying through the deep and charismatic rings of our Saturn??? Yeah cool!!??? It will surely be amazing to dive into the depths