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This is the deepest X-ray image ever of the Tarantula Nebula (30 Doradus) , a massive star-forming region.
Located 160,000 light-years away, it reveals how stars are born using combined data from Webb, Hubble, Chandra, and ALMA.
This is where stars are born…
and where the universe keeps beginning again.
Credit: Nasa
Located 160,000 light-years away, it reveals how stars are born using combined data from Webb, Hubble, Chandra, and ALMA.
This is where stars are born…
and where the universe keeps beginning again.
Credit: Nasa
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Starstruck
A moment frozen in infinity.
The Artemis II crew captured our home — the Milky Way.
A galaxy of billions…
yet we see it as a whisper of light.
Released date : April 07, 2026
Credit: NASA
A moment frozen in infinity.
The Artemis II crew captured our home — the Milky Way.
A galaxy of billions…
yet we see it as a whisper of light.
Released date : April 07, 2026
Credit: NASA
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https://www.esa.int/ESA_Multimedia/Videos/2026/04/Smile_A_global_answer_to_a_global_mystery
SMILE Mission
ESA and China are exploring how Earth protects itself from solar radiation.
For the first time, we will see how solar wind interacts with Earth’s magnetic field.
Understanding this invisible shield helps explain how life survives on our planet.
Credit: ESA
SMILE Mission
ESA and China are exploring how Earth protects itself from solar radiation.
For the first time, we will see how solar wind interacts with Earth’s magnetic field.
Understanding this invisible shield helps explain how life survives on our planet.
Credit: ESA
ESA
Smile: A global answer to a global mystery
The European Space Agency and the Chinese Academy of Sciences are joining hands to uncover how Earth defends itself against dangerous particles and radiation from the Sun.
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Planet-forming Discs
James Webb captured two young star systems surrounded by protoplanetary discs.
These discs are where dust and gas slowly come together to form planets.
Seen edge-on, the star is hidden and glowing dust appears above and below the disc.
Planets are born in these cosmic structures.
Credit: ESA / NASA / CSA
James Webb captured two young star systems surrounded by protoplanetary discs.
These discs are where dust and gas slowly come together to form planets.
Seen edge-on, the star is hidden and glowing dust appears above and below the disc.
Planets are born in these cosmic structures.
Credit: ESA / NASA / CSA
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✨ A Star Before Explosion
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope captured a rare view of Wolf-Rayet 124 (WR 124) — a massive, dying star about 15,000 light-years away in the constellation Sagitta.
This star is in a short, powerful phase before a supernova, violently shedding its outer layers and creating glowing clouds of gas and dust.
WR 124 is about 30 times the mass of the Sun and has already expelled huge amounts of material, helping form cosmic dust — the very substance that later builds stars, planets, and even life.
Webb’s infrared vision reveals this hidden process in stunning detail, offering a rare glimpse into how the universe evolves.
Credit : NASA
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope captured a rare view of Wolf-Rayet 124 (WR 124) — a massive, dying star about 15,000 light-years away in the constellation Sagitta.
This star is in a short, powerful phase before a supernova, violently shedding its outer layers and creating glowing clouds of gas and dust.
WR 124 is about 30 times the mass of the Sun and has already expelled huge amounts of material, helping form cosmic dust — the very substance that later builds stars, planets, and even life.
Webb’s infrared vision reveals this hidden process in stunning detail, offering a rare glimpse into how the universe evolves.
Credit : NASA
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Rosette Nebula(NGC 2237)
A cosmic flower blooming in the dark …
Located about 4,500–5,000 light-years from Earth,
the Rosette Nebula is a vast star-forming region in our Milky Way.
At its center lies the young star cluster NGC 2244.
These massive stars emit intense ultraviolet radiation and strong stellar winds,
pushing away surrounding gas and dust
and creating the nebula’s characteristic hollow shape.
Although invisible to the naked eye,
it can be observed with small telescopes.
We are looking at the birthplace of stars.
Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / WISE
A cosmic flower blooming in the dark …
Located about 4,500–5,000 light-years from Earth,
the Rosette Nebula is a vast star-forming region in our Milky Way.
At its center lies the young star cluster NGC 2244.
These massive stars emit intense ultraviolet radiation and strong stellar winds,
pushing away surrounding gas and dust
and creating the nebula’s characteristic hollow shape.
Although invisible to the naked eye,
it can be observed with small telescopes.
We are looking at the birthplace of stars.
Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / WISE
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