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🔔 Why Subscribe?
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Discovery Point
🎁 NASA T-SHIRT GIVEAWAY! 🚀
To celebrate reaching 1,200 subscribers, I'm giving away a NASA T-shirt to one lucky explorer! 🌌
How to enter:
✅ Subscribe to Discovery Point
✅ Like this post
✅ Answer the question correctly in the comments
❓ QUESTION:
What is the name of NASA's rover that landed on Mars in 2021 and is still exploring the Red Planet today? 🔴
💡 Hint: It is searching for signs of ancient life and collecting rock samples for future return to Earth.
The winner will be randomly selected from the correct answers.
Good luck, everyone! 🚀🌌
3 weeks ago | [YT] | 4
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Discovery Point
Inside the Black Eye Galaxy: Counter‑Rotating Stars and Dark Dust Lanes Messier 64 (M64)
Messier 64, known as the Black Eye Galaxy or Evil Eye Galaxy, is a spiral galaxy located about 17 million light‑years away in the constellation Coma Berenices. Its striking dark band of dust — the “black eye” — is the result of a past galactic merger that set its inner and outer regions rotating in opposite directions. This rare counter‑rotation creates intense turbulence, compressing gas and triggering waves of new star formation.
The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) reveals the galaxy’s sharp dust lanes and bright stellar core in visible light, while the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) penetrates deeper into the dust, exposing hidden star‑forming regions and the complex structure shaped by the ancient collision. Together, these observatories provide one of the most detailed multi‑wavelength views of M64 ever achieved.
4 weeks ago | [YT] | 8
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Discovery Point
🧠🌌 Exposed Cranium Nebula (PMR 1)
This remarkable object is a planetary nebula located approximately 5,000 light-years from Earth.
Despite its name, a planetary nebula has nothing to do with planets. It forms when a Sun-like star reaches the end of its life and ejects its outer layers into space.
The Exposed Cranium Nebula is particularly fascinating because Webb's infrared instruments reveal intricate structures of gas and dust that were previously hidden from view.
At its center lies a hot white dwarf — the exposed core of the original star. The powerful ultraviolet radiation emitted by this stellar remnant causes the surrounding gas to glow.
The image you're seeing is not just a beautiful cloud in space.
It is a glimpse into the future of stars like our Sun.
Billions of years from now, our own Sun may leave behind a similar cosmic monument.
🔭 James Webb Space Telescope
📍 Distance: ~5,000 light-years
⭐ Object Type: Planetary Nebula
#JWST #JamesWebb #Astronomy #Nebula #Space #DiscoveryPoint
4 weeks ago | [YT] | 21
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Discovery Point
🌌 Messier 88 (M88)
Located 63 million light-years from Earth, Messier 88 is one of the most active spiral galaxies in the Virgo Cluster.
Captured by the Hubble Space Telescope, this magnificent galaxy has been traveling through space for hundreds of millions of years, creating new stars within its elegant spiral arms.
Every point of light in this image is part of a cosmic story unfolding far beyond our galaxy.
🚀 Would you like to visit M88 or the Andromeda Galaxy if you had the chance?
#Messier88 #M88 #Hubble #Galaxy #Space #Astronomy #DiscoveryPoint
1 month ago | [YT] | 11
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Discovery Point
Butterfly Nebula (NGC 6302) | One of the Universe's Greatest Wonders
Before you is NGC 6302...
Better known as the Butterfly Nebula.
What appears to be a delicate cosmic butterfly is actually the final chapter in the life of a dying star.
Located thousands of light-years from Earth, this magnificent structure was created when a Sun-like star expelled its outer layers into space.
The glowing blue clouds reveal gas heated to extraordinary temperatures.
At the center lies one of the hottest known stars in our galaxy.
For thousands of years, these expanding clouds have continued their journey through the darkness of space.
A reminder that even in death...
Stars can create extraordinary beauty.
This is the Butterfly Nebula.
One of the universe's most breathtaking masterpieces.
1 month ago | [YT] | 6
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