Hubble captures the spiral galaxy NGC 2841, 46 million light-years away in Ursa Major. Its bright core, dust lanes, and blue stars stand out, but fewer emission nebulae suggest lower star formation. Fiery young stars likely cleared the remaining gas.
Credit: NASA, ESA, Hubble, WFC3 Team
Credit: NASA, ESA, Hubble, WFC3 Team
Comments
What exactly is the bright core composed of?
Literally, with your own eyeballs.
The only thing that's fake here is whatever you read that convinced you of your idiotic ideas.
Ought to Q the NASA now where the tax-payers money goes.
Have you ever looked through a telescope?
By all means, continue to wallow in your ignorance. Who am I to interrupt a fool? 🤷
I'm not trying to convince anyone of anything, especially not people living in a fantasy world that doesn't bear any relation to reality.
It's unimaginable.
Rodents, along with many other smaller mammals, were quite prevalent.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eocene
I don't know how big the one pictured is compared to the Milky Way but I can't imagine it's smaller by much, and it could easily be larger.
Feels like we're creeping on old Facebook pics of other galaxies when you think about it, though.
"We're" so far away from this though. It takes a level of ingenuity and ability to work together that we simply do not possess on a scale necessary to accomplish this. The planet will die before we ever travel space.