The Deep Lagoon also known as M8, captured at Mt. Lemmon Skycentre, Arizona, is located on the constellation of Sagittarius towards the centre of Milky Way.
Image Credit : Adam Block//Mt. Lemmon SkyCentre Arizona//Univ.Arizona
Annular or the Ring Of Fire solar eclipse is tomorrow
The time of maximum eclipse, when that "ring of fire" event happens, will be at 2:40 a.m. EDT (0640 GMT) Sunday, June 21, when the moon crosses into the center of the sphere of the sun, from Earth's perspective. The eclipse starts at 11:45 p.m. EDT Saturday, June 20 (0345 GMT Sunday) and ends at 5:34 a.m. EDT (1034 GMT) June 20, according to NASA.
Regions in the path of visibility include the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Central African Republic, South Sudan, Sudan, Ethiopia, the Red Sea, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Oman, the Gulf of Oman, Pakistan, India, China, Taiwan, the Philippine Sea (south of Guam), northern Australia and the north Pacific Ocean.
Picture description : An annular solar eclipse as seen by Japan's Hinode spacecraft on May, 20, 2012.
Full Moon in full Colour - April the 6th of 2020
PC: Joseph Brimacombe//flickr
Our sun is entering into a sleepy state of inactivity— a recurring phenomenon known as Solar Minimum.
A period of minimal solar activity, during which the surface solar movement diminishes, resulting in a trough in solar eruptions and coronal mass ejections (CME) activities. Though it is a period of (relative) calm for the otherwise seething ball of energy, it doesn't hold any consequence(s) for us, as Earthlings. Sun, as we know it, will remain the same.
Also known as the Seven Sisters and M45, the Pleiades lies about 400 light years away toward the constellation of Taurus (Bull).
Picture Credit & Copyright: Stanislav Volskiy
Source: apod.nasa.gov
Saturn is nestling close to Jupiter this week, in an event known as the Great Conjunction that occurs regularly, aligning these two gas giants every twenty years or so. Skywatchers can catch this once in a decades cosmic marriage in the early predawn hours.
Photo Credit : Techlife
'134340' - Bts but you're lost in Space
Jupiter and its faint rings– known as the Jovian ring system , as seen through infrared.
Egg NebulaPhoto by geckzilla via flickr(cc)
The Pelican Nebula (IC 5067/5070) an H II region associated with the North American Nebula in the Constellation Cygnus snapped by Don Bryden
Photo Credit : DonBryden/Flickr
Barred Spiral Galaxy NGC 1300
Image Credit: Hubble Heritage Team,ESA, NASA