Dosya:Dim, but still distinct (potw2405a).jpg - Vikipedi
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Dosya:Dim, but still distinct (potw2405a).jpg

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Dosya:Dim, but still distinct (potw2405a).jpg
Bu önizlemenin boyutu: 800 × 489 piksel. Diğer çözünürlükler: 320 × 196 piksel | 640 × 391 piksel | 1.024 × 626 piksel | 1.280 × 782 piksel | 3.344 × 2.043 piksel.
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Özet

AçıklamaDim, but still distinct (potw2405a).jpg
English: This image of the spiral galaxy UGC 11105 is not as bright and vivid as some other Hubble Pictures of the Week. This softly luminous galaxy — lying in the constellation Hercules, about 110 million light-years from Earth — seems outshone by the sparkling foreground stars that surround it. The type II supernova which took place in this galaxy in 2019, while no longer visible in this image, definitely outshone the galaxy at the time! To be more precise, UGC 11105 has an apparent magnitude of around 13.6 in the optical light regime (this image was created using data that covers the heart of the optical regime, in addition to ultraviolet data). Astronomers have different ways of quantifying how bright celestial objects are, and apparent magnitude is one of them.Firstly, the ‘apparent’ part of this quantity refers to the fact that apparent magnitude only describes how bright objects appear to be from Earth, which is not the same thing as measuring how bright they actually are. For example, in reality the variable star Betelgeuse is about 21 000 times brighter than our Sun, but because the Sun is much, much closer to Earth, Betelgeuse appears to be vastly less bright than it. The ‘magnitude’ part is a little harder to describe, because the magnitude scale does not have a unit associated with it, unlike, for example, mass, which we measure in kilograms, or length, which we measure in metres. Magnitude values only have meaning relative to other magnitude values. Furthermore, the scale is not linear, but is a type of mathematical scale known as ‘reverse logarithmic’, which also means that lower-magnitude objects are brighter than higher-magnitude objects. As an example, UGC 11105 has an apparent magnitude of around 13.6 in the optical, whereas the Sun has an apparent magnitude of about -26.8. Accounting for the reverse logarithmic scale, this means that the Sun appears to be about 14 thousand trillion times brighter than UGC 11105 from our perspective here on Earth, even though UGC 11105 is an entire galaxy! The faintest stars that humans can see with the naked eye come in at about sixth magnitude, with most galaxies being much dimmer than this. Hubble, however, has been known to detect objects with apparent magnitudes up to the extraordinary value of 31, so UGC 11105 does not really present much of a challenge. [Image Description: A spiral galaxy, with two prominent arms that are tightly wound around the brighter core. The arms disperse into a wide halo of stars and dust at their ends, giving the galaxy an oval shape. It is flanked by a number of bright stars in the foreground, each with a little cross over it due to light diffraction, and some distant background galaxies as well.]
Tarih 29 Ocak 2024 (upload date)
Kaynak Dim, but still distinct
Yazar ESA/Hubble & NASA, R. J. Foley (UC Santa Cruz)
Diğer sürümler
  • TIFF version
    TIFF version

Lisanslama


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Altyazılar

Bu dosyanın temsil ettiği şeyin tek satırlık açıklamasını ekleyin.
This image of the spiral galaxy UGC 11105 is not as bright and vivid as some other Hubble Pictures of the Week.

Bu dosyada gösterilen öğeler

betimlenen

UGC 11105

yaratıcı

Hubble Uzay Teleskobu

telif hakkı durumu

telif hakkı alınmış

telif hakkı lisansı

Creative Commons Atıf 4.0 Uluslararası

ortam türü

image/jpeg

boyu

2.043 piksel

genişliği

3.344 piksel

dosya boyutu

2.185.229 bayt

sağlama toplamı

cc49baf6469cb892386dd34fbc9b1abd457dc10f

tespit yöntemi: SHA-1

kuruluşu

29 Ocak 2024

dosya kaynağı

internette olan dosya

açıklandığı URL: https://esahubble.org/images/potw2405a
URL: https://cdn.esahubble.org/archives/images/large/potw2405a.jpg

pHash checksum İngilizce

1o5egoo1sq939nbvug7b6q0onw95oclyunjaqvjllcpaor6yl2

tespit yöntemi: JImagehash perceptual hash İngilizce

Dosya geçmişi

Dosyanın herhangi bir zamandaki hâli için ilgili tarih/saat kısmına tıklayın.

Tarih/SaatKüçük resimBoyutlarKullanıcıYorum
güncel09.00, 29 Ocak 202409.00, 29 Ocak 2024 tarihindeki sürümün küçültülmüş hâli3.344 × 2.043 (2,08 MB)OptimusPrimeBot#Spacemedia - Upload of https://cdn.esahubble.org/archives/images/large/potw2405a.jpg via Commons:Spacemedia

Dosya kullanımı

Bu görüntü dosyasına bağlantısı olan sayfalar:

  • UGC 11105

Küresel dosya kullanımı

Aşağıdaki diğer vikiler bu dosyayı kullanmaktadır:

  • de.wikipedia.org üzerinde kullanımı
    • PGC 61361
  • en.wikipedia.org üzerinde kullanımı
    • UGC 11105

Üstveri

Bu dosyada, muhtemelen fotoğraf makinesi ya da tarayıcı tarafından eklenmiş ek bilgiler mevcuttur. Eğer dosyada sonradan değişiklik yapıldıysa, bazı bilgiler yeni değişikliğe göre eski kalmış olabilir.

KaynakESA/Hubble
Katkı/SağlayıcıESA/Hubble & NASA, R. J. Foley (UC Santa Cruz)
Kısa başlık
  • Dim, but still distinct
Resim başlığı
  • This image of the spiral galaxy UGC 11105 is not as bright and vivid as some other Hubble Pictures of the Week. This softly luminous galaxy— lying in the constellation Hercules, about 110 million light-years from Earth — seems outshone by the sparkling foreground stars that surround it. The type II supernova which took place in this galaxy in 2019, while no longer visible in this image, definitely outshone the galaxy at the time! To be more precise, UGC 11105 has an apparent magnitude of around 13.6 in the optical light regime (this image was created using data that covers the heart of the optical regime, in addition to ultraviolet data). Astronomers have different ways of quantifying how bright celestial objects are, and apparent magnitude is one of them. Firstly, the ‘apparent’ part of this quantity refers to the fact that apparent magnitude only describes how bright objects appear to be from Earth, which is not the same thing as measuring how bright they actually are. For example, in reality the variable star Betelgeuse is about 21 000 times brighter than our Sun, but because the Sun is much, much closer to Earth, Betelgeuse appears to be vastly less bright than it. The ‘magnitude’ part is a little harder to describe, because the magnitude scale does not have a unit associated with it, unlike, for example, mass, which we measure in kilograms, or length, which we measure in metres. Magnitude values only have meaning relative to other magnitude values. Furthermore, the scale is not linear, but is a type of mathematical scale known as ‘reverse logarithmic’, which also means that lower-magnitude objects are brighter than higher-magnitude objects.  As an example, UGC 11105 has an apparent magnitude of around 13.6 in the optical, whereas the Sun has an apparent magnitude of about -26.8. Accounting for the reverse logarithmic scale, this means that the Sun appears to be about 14 thousand trillion times brighter than UGC 11105 from our perspective here on Earth, even though UGC 11105 is an entire galaxy! The faintest stars that humans can see with the naked eye come in at about sixth magnitude, with most galaxies being much dimmer than this. Hubble, however, has been known to detect objects with apparent magnitudes up to the extraordinary value of 31, so UGC 11105 does not really present much of a challenge.  [Image Description: A spiral galaxy, with two prominent arms that are tightly wound around the brighter core. The arms disperse into a wide halo of stars and dust at their ends, giving the galaxy an oval shape. It is flanked by a number of bright stars in the foreground, each with a little cross over it due to light diffraction, and some distant background galaxies as well.]
Kullanım şartları
  • Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Verinin ilk yaratılma zamanı06.00, 29 Ocak 2024
Kullanılan yazılımAdobe Photoshop 25.3 (Windows)
Dosya değişiklik tarihi ve zamanı17.22, 23 Ocak 2024
Dijitalleştirme zamanı12.55, 10 Ekim 2023
Üst veri son değişim tarihi18.22, 23 Ocak 2024
Özgün belgenin benzersiz kimliğixmp.did:b894035d-5ab2-134e-af10-b7adaec94502
Anahtar kelimelerUGC 11105
İletişim bilgileri

https://esahubble.org

ESA Office, Space Telescope Science Institute, 3700 San Martin Dr

Baltimore, MD, 21218 United States

IIM sürümü4
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