The right half of the image is covered

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shoponhossaiassn
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The right half of the image is covered

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This shot from Hubble offers an up-close look at the Helix Nebula.

“What look like raindrops are comet-like filaments that likely formed when hot stellar winds and radiation plowed into shells of gas and dust,” tweeted the Hubble project.

A star or a bubble?
The background of space is black, dotted with pink stars randomly across the frame. in a semi-transparent red haze, which is broken up by a dark, uneven dust lane at the bottom. At center-left is a large white star. It is surrounded by light red and dark red gas and dust in the shape of a large irregular circle, which is less transparent than the section telegram database at right. The circle is about a quarter of the size of the red at right. A smaller pink star appears next to the white star. Some background stars shine through this circle.
Hubblesite/Hubble


A massive star can easily be spotted in this photo of Nebula N83B.

In the photo, the star appears as a luminous spherical bubble within the nebula.

Andromeda Galaxy
The Andromeda galaxy, or M31, is shown here in far-infrared and radio wavelengths of light. Some of the hydrogen gas (red) that traces the edge of Andromeda's disc was pulled in from intergalactic space, and some was torn away from galaxies that merged with Andromeda far in the past. The image is composed of data from the European Space Agency (ESA) Herschel mission, supplemented with data from ESA's retired Planck observatory and two retired NASA missions: the Infrared Astronomy Survey and Cosmic Background Explorer, as well as the Green Bank Telescope, WRST, and IRAM radio telescopes.
Hubblesite/Hubble
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