An image based on brand-new deep-space data appears to show a wormhole before our eyes.
A new image by Judy Schmidt is based on the data collected by the James Webb Space Telescope, and it shows a glow eerily similar to that of the PhantomGalaxy.
"I've been doing this for 10 years now, and webb data is new and exciting," he said. I will make something with it.
Live updates: NASA's James Webb Space Telescope mission
Gallery: James Webb Space Telescope's 1st photos
The image shows the dust lanes in the universe. The Phantom galaxy is considered to be the perfect spiral because it is so symmetrical.
The universe has been imaged many times before, including by the Hubble Space Telescope. The mid-infrared range that highlights Cosmic Dust and the unique 18-segment hexagonal mirror are what makes the images stand out.
The man observed M74 this week. Gabriel Brammer, an astronomer at the Cosmic Dawn Center, shared the data on the social networking site.
amateur imagers and scientists are free to use the data as long as they credit the source when publishing, as a selected set of raw images is made publicly available at this portal a few hours or days after observations, and amateur imagers and scientists are free to use the data as long as
On July 12th, the first operational images of deep-space objects were released by the telescope. The gas giant's moons and rings were included in the new images on July 14.
The week's work shows how easy it is to switch between solar system objects and distant ones when stars begin to shine.
The more advanced software of today will benefit from many of the concepts in her video on the subject.
You can find more amazing images of Webb photos and other Cosmic objects at the new tab on the flickr page.
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