ملف:Strike! (51847503236).jpg
الملف الأصلي (3٬008 × 2٬968 بكسل حجم الملف: 2٫89 ميجابايت، نوع MIME: image/jpeg)
هذا ملف من ويكيميديا كومنز. معلومات من صفحة وصفه مبينة في الأسفل. كومنز مستودع ملفات ميديا ذو رخصة حرة. |
ملخص
الوصفStrike! (51847503236).jpg |
The subject of this image is a group of three galaxies, collectively known as NGC 7764A. They were imaged by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, using both its Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) and Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3). The two galaxies in the upper right of the image appear to be interacting with one another — indeed, the long trails of stars and gas extending from them both give the impression that they have both just been struck at great speed, thrown into disarray by the bowling-ball-shaped galaxy to the lower left of the image. In reality, however, interactions between galaxies happen over very long time periods, and galaxies rarely collide head-on with one another. It is also unclear whether the galaxy to the lower left is actually interacting with the other two, although they are so relatively close in space that it seems possible that they are. By happy coincidence, the collective interaction between these galaxies have caused the two on the upper right to form a shape, which from our Solar System's perspective, ressembles the starship known as the USS Enterprise from Star Trek! NGC 7764A, which lies about 425 million light years from Earth in the constellation Phoenix, is a fascinating example of just how awkward astronomical nomenclature can be. The three galaxies are individually referred to as NGC 7764A1, NGC 7764A2 and NGC 7764A3, and just to be really difficult, an entirely separate galaxy, named NGC 7764, sits in the skies about a Moon’s distance (as seen from Earth) away. This rather haphazard naming makes more sense when we consider that many of the catalogues for keeping track of celestial bodies were compiled well over 100 years ago, long before modern technology made standardising scientific terminology much easier. As it is, many astronomical objects have several different names, or might have names that are so similar to other objects’ names that they cause confusion. Credits: ESA/Hubble & NASA, J. Dalcanton, Dark Energy Survey, DOE, FNAL, DECam, CTIO, NOIRLab/NSF/AURA, ESO; <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" rel="noreferrer nofollow">CC BY 4.0</a> Acknowledgement: J. Schmidt |
التاريخ | |
المصدر | Strike! |
المؤلف | European Space Agency |
ترخيص
- يحقُّ لك:
- مشاركة العمل – نسخ العمل وتوزيعه وبثُّه
- إعادة إنتاج العمل – تعديل العمل
- حسب الشروط التالية:
- نسب العمل إلى مُؤَلِّفه – يلزم نسب العمل إلى مُؤَلِّفه بشكل مناسب وتوفير رابط للرخصة وتحديد ما إذا أجريت تغييرات. بالإمكان القيام بذلك بأية طريقة معقولة، ولكن ليس بأية طريقة تشير إلى أن المرخِّص يوافقك على الاستعمال.
نَشَر europeanspaceagency هذه الصُّورة على موقع فلِيكر بتاريخ https://flickr.com/photos/37472264@N04/51847503236. ورَاجَعها FlickreviewR 2 في ١٣ يونيو ٢٠٢٢، وتأكَّدَ أَنَّها مُرخَّصة برخصة cc-by-2.0. |
١٣ يونيو ٢٠٢٢
قيمة ما بدون عنصر ويكي بيانات
٢٤ يناير 2022
image/jpeg
Flickr photo ID الإنجليزية
تاريخ الملف
اضغط على زمن/تاريخ لرؤية الملف كما بدا في هذا الزمن.
زمن/تاريخ | صورة مصغرة | الأبعاد | مستخدم | تعليق | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
حالي | 13:13، 13 يونيو 2022 | 3٬008 × 2٬968 (2٫89 ميجابايت) | Astromessier | Transferred from Flickr via #flickr2commons |
استخدام الملف
الصفحة التالية تستخدم هذا الملف:
الاستخدام العالمي للملف
الويكيات الأخرى التالية تستخدم هذا الملف:
- الاستخدام في az.wikipedia.org
- الاستخدام في de.wikipedia.org
- الاستخدام في mk.wikipedia.org
- الاستخدام في www.wikidata.org
بيانات وصفية
هذا الملف يحتوي على معلومات إضافية، غالبا ما تكون أضيفت من قبل الكاميرا الرقمية أو الماسح الضوئي المستخدم في إنشاء الملف.
إذا كان الملف قد عدل عن حالته الأصلية، فبعض التفاصيل قد لا تعبر عن الملف المعدل.
تاريخ ووقت توليد البيانات | 06:00، 24 يناير 2022 |
---|---|
عنوان قصير | Strike! |
الرصيد/المزود | ESA/Hubble & NASA, J. Dalcanton, |
المصدر | ESA/Hubble |
عنوان الصورة | The subject of this image is a group of three galaxies, collectively known as NGC 7764A. They were imaged by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, using both its Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) and Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3). The two galaxies in the upper right of the image appear to be interacting with one another — indeed, the long trails of stars and gas extending from them both give the impression that they have both just been struck at great speed, thrown into disarray by the bowling-ball-shaped galaxy to the lower left of the image. In reality, however, interactions between galaxies happen over very long time periods, and galaxies rarely collide head-on with one another. It is also unclear whether the galaxy to the lower left is actually interacting with the other two, although they are so relatively close in space that it seems possible that they are. By happy coincidence, the collective interaction between these galaxies have caused the two on the upper right to form a shape, which from our Solar System's perspective, ressembles the starship known as the USS Enterprise from Star Trek! NGC 7764A, which lies about 425 million light years from Earth in the constellation Phoenix, is a fascinating example of just how awkward astronomical nomenclature can be. The three galaxies are individually referred to as NGC 7764A1, NGC 7764A2 and NGC 7764A3, and just to be really difficult, an entirely separate galaxy, named NGC 7764, sits in the skies about a Moon’s distance (as seen from Earth) away. This rather haphazard naming makes more sense when we consider that many of the catalogues for keeping track of celestial bodies were compiled well over 100 years ago, long before modern technology made standardising scientific terminology much easier. As it is, many astronomical objects have several different names, or might have names that are so similar to other objects’ names that they cause confusion. |
الناشر | ESA/Hubble |
شروط الاستخدام |
|
تعليق ملف JPEG | The subject of this image is a group of three galaxies, collectively known as NGC 7764A. They were imaged by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, using both its Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) and Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3). The two galaxies in the upper right of the image appear to be interacting with one another — indeed, the long trails of stars and gas extending from them both give the impression that they have both just been struck at great speed, thrown into disarray by the bowling-ball-shaped galaxy to the lower left of the image. In reality, however, interactions between galaxies happen over very long time periods, and galaxies rarely collide head-on with one another. It is also unclear whether the galaxy to the lower left is actually interacting with the other two, although they are so relatively close in space that it seems possible that they are. By happy coincidence, the collective interaction between these galaxies have caused the two on the upper right to form a shape, which from our Solar System's perspective, ressembles the starship known as the USS Enterprise from Star Trek! NGC 7764A, which lies about 425 million light years from Earth in the constellation Phoenix, is a fascinating example of just how awkward astronomical nomenclature can be. The three galaxies are individually referred to as NGC 7764A1, NGC 7764A2 and NGC 7764A3, and just to be really difficult, an entirely separate galaxy, named NGC 7764, sits in the skies about a Moon’s distance (as seen from Earth) away. This rather haphazard naming makes more sense when we consider that many of the catalogues for keeping track of celestial bodies were compiled well over 100 years ago, long before modern technology made standardising scientific terminology much easier. As it is, many astronomical objects have several different names, or might have names that are so similar to other objects’ names that they cause confusion. |
التوجيه | عادي |
الدقة الأفقية | 10 دي بي سي |
الدقة الرأسية | 10 دي بي سي |
البرمجيات المستخدمة | Adobe Photoshop 23.1 (Windows) |
تاريخ ووقت تغيير الملف | 21:07، 12 يناير 2022 |
وضع Y و C | توسيط |
نسخة Exif | 2.32 |
تاريخ ووقت التحويل الرقمي | 09:58، 19 ديسمبر 2021 |
معنى كل مكونة |
|
نسخة Flashpix المدعومة | 1 |
الفضاء اللوني | غير معاير |
نسخة IIM | 4 |
الكلمات المفتاحية | NGC 7764A |
بت لكل مكونة |
|
نظام الضغط | غير مضغوط |
الارتفاع | 2٬968 بك |
العرض | 3٬008 بك |
تركيب البكسل | آر جي بي |
عدد المكونات | 3 |
معلومات الاتصال |
ESA Office, Space Telescope Science Institute, 3700 San Martin Dr Baltimore, MD, 21218 United States |
نوع الوسيط | Observation |
آخر تعديل للبيانات التعريفية | 22:07، 12 يناير 2022 |
المعرف الفريد للمستند الأصلي | xmp.did:2a6289ef-74d2-4b69-8955-a66c21ef9e37 |