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Scroll through the Milky Way — in infrared ❤️ In visible light, most of our home galaxy's stars are hidden behind thick clouds of dust and gas. But in the infrared eyes of NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, distant stars and other features shone with clarity and color. Infrared light is just beyond the visible spectrum; its waves can pass through dense regions of dust. Humans can't see them, though we can feel them as heat. This Spitzer panorama (first released in 2005) spans 9 degrees of Earth's night sky — about the width of your fist, held out at arm's length. Its infrared data is displayed here in shades of red, orange, green, and blue. Keep an eye out for bubbles formed by powerful forces from newborn stars, or star clusters in groups of blue, yellow, and green specks. Spitzer, the first telescope to detect light from a planet outside our solar system, launched in 2004 and studied the cosmos until 2020. Its findings are still helping us learn more about our universe. Image description: A highly-detailed, panoramic image of the Milky Way, mostly in shades of red. Bright red clouds and nebulae swirl through the image from left to right, with individual stars of various sizes dotting the entire image. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Wisconsin #NASA #Space #Universe #Telescope #MilkyWay #Panorama

06.05 00:34

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