Image Credit & Copyright: Wally Pacholka (AstroPics.com, TWAN)
Monday, November 2, 2015
NASA Photo of the Day
November 1:
The Milky Way Over Monument Valley
Image Credit & Copyright: Wally Pacholka (AstroPics.com, TWAN)
Explanation:
You don't have to be at Monument Valley to see the Milky Way arch across the sky like this -- but it helps.
Only at Monument Valley
USA
would you see a
picturesque foreground
that includes these iconic rock peaks called
buttes.
Buttes are composed of hard rock left behind after water
has eroded away the surrounding soft rock.
In the featured image taken in 2012, the closest butte on the left and
the butte to its right are known as
the Mittens, while
Merrick Butte
can be seen just further to the right.
High overhead stretches a band of diffuse light that is the central disk of our
spiral
Milky Way Galaxy.
The band of the Milky Way can be
spotted by almost anyone on
almost any clear night when
far enough from a city and
surrounding bright lights.
Image Credit & Copyright: Wally Pacholka (AstroPics.com, TWAN)
Labels:
cool stuff
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