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Top 10 never-before-seen breathtaking pictures clicked by Webb Telescope

Top 10 never-before-seen breathtaking pictures clicked by Webb Telescope

India Today2 days ago
Top 10 never-before-seen breathtaking pictures clicked by Webb Telescope
13 Aug, 2025
Credit: Nasa
Webb's newest look at NGC 6072 reveals an unusual, asymmetrical scene, potentially caused by a binary star system (two stars orbiting one another).
In this picture of Cat's Paw Nebula, the active star-forming region is revealing more about how young stars are shaping the surrounding gas and dust.
This new mosaic combines Webb's observations with NASA's Hubble Space Telescope's, increasing our understanding of open star clusters NGC 460 and NGC 456.
Open star clusters are made up of dozens to thousands of stars held loosely together by gravity.
This galaxy, called Messier 82 (M82) or the Cigar Galaxy, is smaller than our Milky Way, but 5x as luminous and forms stars 10x faster! Its fast rate of star formation classifies M82 as a starburst galaxy.
NASA's James Webb Space Telescope captured the central region of the Bullet Cluster with its NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera). The scene contains two massive galaxy clusters that sit on either side of the large, light blue spiral galaxy at the center.
Deep in this Webb image are little green galaxies, and they're possibly the cause of an extreme cosmic makeover. For its first billion or so years, the universe was immersed in a fog of neutral hydrogen gas.
Webb captured this image, showing the iconic Sombrero galaxy in near-infrared light for the first time. In November 2024, Webb took a look at this galaxy in mid-infrared, adding to the Hubble Space Telescope's visible light view.
These observations of Jupiter's auroras at 3.36 microns (F335M) were captured with NASA's James Webb Space Telescope's NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera.
Webb is "running rings" around this planetary nebula, NGC 1514, bringing it into sharp focus with this new mid-infrared look. At the center are a pair of stars, one of which shed its layers of dust and gas as it neared the end of its life cycle.
This outflow from a newly forming star gives this Herbig-Haro object (HH 49/50) its nickname, the 'cosmic tornado.' This pillar of gas and dust looks like it's topped by a galaxy.
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