James Webb Space Telescope: Google doodle celebrates farthest picture of universe ever taken

Humanity watched in awe yesterday as the first images from the distant universe were released taken by the James Webb Space Telescope. Google’s doodle celebrated ‘the farthest picture of the universe ever taken’, it says

NASA first released an image of a star from the Southern Ring Nebula, which is slowly dying and covered in dust and layers of light.

He then posted another sizzling image of the galaxy cluster of Stefan’s Quintet (the first galaxy group ever observed by man), where it shows massive shock waves and tidal tails. In fact, this specific snapshot was characterized as “first place in the observation of space”.

Nevertheless, the impression was stolen by the image from the Carina Nebulaas a sea of ​​stars and cosmic rocks is seen, with ultraviolet radiation and stellar winds forming colossal walls of dust and gas.

The images released by NASA from the James Webb Telescope:

NASA’s presentation:

The first image from space

The image first that introduced at the beginning of the presentation by Joe Biden and NASA chief Bill Nelson shows the 4.6-billion-year-old galaxy cluster called SMACS 0723, whose combined mass acts as a “gravitational lens,” warping space to greatly magnify light coming from more distant galaxies behind it , as reported by the Reuters agency.

Διαστημικό τηλεσκόπιοΔιαστημικό τηλεσκόπιοSpace telescope
The James Webb Telescope

Source: News Beast

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