• AOL
  • MAIL
    • Pawparazzi Report for May 19-25, 2013
    • Dog Bite Prevention Q&A With Darlene Arden
    • Awkward Families & Embarrassed Pets Celebrate Memorial Day
    • Baby Pancake the Cat Eats Watermelon
    • Daily Adorbs for May 21, 2013
    • The 100 Greatest Quotes From 'Arrested Development'
    • 10 Summer Beers for More Fun in the Sun
    • Prison Life in America
    • Today's Funniest Photos 5-21-13
    • Today's Funniest Photos 5-20-13
Sign In / Register

SKYE

  • Maps & Radar
  • Storm Center
  • News
  • Living
  • Video
  • My Cities
  • °F · °C

Welcome to SKYE

the new AOL Weather
What's new on Skye

The SKYE’s Weather Experience

We have recently redesigned AOL Weather. Learn about how we changed the way you experience weather forecasts.

See What's New My Cities
x

Skye Weather+Photo

The app where life and weather come together

Available on the app store
x
Seattle, WA Cloudy 46°
Follow us:
Facebook TwitterGoogle+
  • Follow @SkyeOnAol
  • Google+

30 Mind-Blowing Space Photos from 2012

See stunning out-of-this-world images from the past year
Related: Space

By SKYE Editors Dec 17, 2012

  • Credit: NASA/SDO/AIA, NASA/STEREO, SOHO (ESA & NASA)
    1 of 30

    A long filament erupted on the sun on Aug. 31, 2012. The filament of solar material had been hovering in the sun's atmosphere, or corona, and erupted into space, creating a coronal mass ejection, or CME. The flare traveled at an astonishing 900 miles per second, and connected with Earth's magnetic environment, causing aurora to appear on the night of Sept. 3.

    Click through for more amazing space photos.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • ESA/Hubble & NASA
    2 of 30

    The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope captured this colorful view of the center of globular cluster NGC 6362 and released the image on Nov. 2. Globular clusters are some of the oldest structures in the universe, and the stars in NCG 6362 are around 10 billion years old.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    3 of 30

    This stunning photo shows the moon and Earth's atmosphere as seen from the International Space Station.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • ESO/T. Preibisch
    4 of 30

    ESO's Very Large Telescope captured the most detailed infrared image of the Carina Nebula stellar nursery this February. This cloud of glowing gas is about 7,500 light years from Earth and includes several of the brightest and heaviest stars known.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    5 of 30

    A brilliant shot of Venus crossing the sun. Hinode spacecraft captured the image on June 6.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA/JPL-Caltech
    6 of 30

    Located 650 light years from Earth, the Helix nebula is the cosmic remains of a dying star. In this combined image released Oct. 3 from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope and the Galaxy Evolution Explorer, the star's dusty outer layers glow from ultraviolet radiation being pumped out by its stellar core.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
    7 of 30

    This image depicts the unilluminated side of Saturn's rings and was taken in green light with NASA's Cassini spacecraft wide-angle camera on Aug. 19, 2012. The view was captured at a distance of approximately 1.5 million miles from Saturn. 

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • ESO
    8 of 30

    The ESO's La Silla Observatory in Chile captured this image of a bright feather-like cloud of glowing gas. Called the Pencil Nebula, this streak of vibrant red and blue is part of a ring of wreckage resulting from a supernova explosion that occurred 11,000 years ago.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS
    9 of 30

    NASA's Curiosity rover this fall used the Mars Hand Lens Imager (MAHLI) to capture dozens of high-resolution images that were combined into self-portrait images of the rover.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • ESO/B. Bailleul
    10 of 30

    This view of the Thor's Helmut Nebula, also known as NGC 2359, was captured on Oct. 5. The helmet-shaped nebula is around 15,000 light-years away from Earth.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS
    11 of 30

    On Aug. 27, NASA released a high-resolution shot of the dark dunes and layered rock at the base of Mars' Mount Sharp, Curiosity's eventual destination. The image, which was taken on Aug. 23, looks south-southwest from the rover's landing site. The top ridge of the distant mountain is about 10 miles from the rover.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA/NOAA/GSFC/Suomi NPP/VIIRS/Norman Kuring
    12 of 30

    This composite uses a number of images of the Earth's surface taken by instruments onboard the Suomi NPP satellite on Jan. 4, creating an image similar to the famed "Blue Marble."

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    13 of 30

    The crew aboard the International Space Station captured this extraordinary nighttime image from space while overlooking Moscow on March 28. The image captures the hazy green of the aurora borealis and the shining light of daybreak on the Earth's horizon. 

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA, ESA, and the Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)
    14 of 30

    This cosmic skyrocket is actually a geyser of hot gas from a newborn star that splashes against and ricochets off a cloud core composed of molecular hydrogen. Known as Herbig-Haro 110 and spotted in the constellation Orion, the geyser is located some 1,300 light years from Earth. Hubble Space Telescope captured the image and NASA released it July 3.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • ESO
    15 of 30

    The strange galaxy Centaurus A is pictured in an image released on May 16 by the European Southern Observatory. Centaurus A is a massive elliptical galaxy with a supermassive black hole at its heart. It's about 12 million light years away in the southern constellation of Centaurus.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO)
    16 of 30

    This photo of a dying red giant star depicted an unexpected spiral structure around its center. Astronomers surmise that this might be what Earth's sun looks like at the end of its life. These spirals had never been seen by astronomers before and are believed to have been caused by a hidden companion star orbiting the red giant.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • X-ray: NASA/CXC/SAO; IR & UV: NASA/JPL-Caltech; Optical: NASA/STScI
    17 of 30

    This composite image of M101 (also known as the Pinwheel Galaxy) combines data from four of NASA's space-based telescopes. X-rays from Chandra (purple) reveal the hottest and most energetic areas due to exploded stars, superheated gas, and material falling toward black holes. Infrared data from Spitzer (red) shows dusty lanes in the galaxy where stars are forming, while Hubble data (yellow) traces the light from stars. Ultraviolet emission detected by GALEX (blue) shows emission from young stars.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA Earth Observatory
    18 of 30

    This stunning view of Earth reveals the planet at night in unprecedented detail, earning it the nickname, "Black Marble." Released by NASA Dec. 5, it was assembled from multiple shots taken by the Suomi NPP satellite during April and October 2012. The new data was mapped over existing Blue Marble imagery of Earth to provide a realistic view of the planet.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
    19 of 30

    This image of a cyclone over Saturn from NASA's Cassini mission was taken on Nov. 27 with Cassini's narrow-angle camera. The camera was pointing toward Saturn from approximately 224,618 miles away. 

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • ESO. Acknowledgement: VPHAS+ Consortium/Cambridge Astronomical Survey Unit
    20 of 30

    A spectacular new image of the star-forming Carina Nebula was captured by the VLT Survey Telescope at ESO's Paranal Observatory on June 5.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA
    21 of 30

    NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) mission recently discovered thousands of newfound supermassive blackholes and galaxies -- called Hot DOGs. These dust-obscured galaxies are twice as hot as similar objects and among the most luminous, brightest galaxies known. Some emit 1,000 times more energy than the Milky Way. On Aug. 29, NASA released images from the telescope, marking the new Hot DOGs with magenta symbols.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • ESA/NASA
    22 of 30

    NASA's Hubble Telescope captured this image of Eta Carinae, a binary star system. In 1843, Eta Carinae was the second-brightest star in the night sky, but by the 20th century, it was invisible to the naked eye. Eta Carinae happens to be one of the closest stars to Earth that is likely to explode in a supernova in the relatively near future (though in astronomical timeframes, the "near future" could still be a million years away). 

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA/Stephen Leshin
    23 of 30

    Described as a "dusty curtain" or "ghostly apparition," mysterious reflection nebula VdB 152 is very faint. Also called Ced 201, it is nearly 1,400 light years away.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • ESA/NASA
    24 of 30

    On July 2, Hubble Space Telescope posted this portrait of dying star Camelopardalis (U Cam for short) as it released a spherical shell of gas. U Cam is becoming increasingly unstable, and every few thousand years the red giant's core fuses and it expels stellar material in these eruptions. Although the star itself is small enough to fit into a single pixel of the photo, its brightness makes it appear much larger than it is.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • GREG WOOD/AFP/Getty Images
    25 of 30

    Eclipse-hunters flocked to Queensland, Australia's tropical northeast on Nov. 14 to watch the region's first total solar eclipse in 1,300 years. 

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • X-ray: NASA/CXC/PSU/L.Townsley et al.; Optical: NASA/STScI; Infrared: NASA/JPL/PSU/L.Townsley et al.
    26 of 30

    Mammoth Tarantula Nebula is an interstellar cloud made up of helium, hydrogen, dust and gases. According to NASA, it's "one of the largest star-forming regions located close to the Milky Way." It got the name because its filaments were thought to look like spindly spider legs. NASA released the image in April of this year.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • ESO/VVV Consortium
    27 of 30

    This incredible image of the central parts of the Milky Way was created by combining thousands of individual images from ESO's VISTA survey telescope into a single monumental mosaic. The image depicts a much larger number of individual stars in the central parts of the Milky Way than was previously able to be seen because VISTA's camera is sensitive to infrared light and can see through much of the dust that blocks the view for optical telescopes. 

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NASA
    28 of 30

    On Jul 20, NASA released the highest-resolution images ever taken of the sun's corona. The corona is the plasma atmosphere around the sun, usually only visible during solar eclipses. The High Resolution Coronal Imager, or Hi-C, captured this detailed shot.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • NOAJ/Subaru/J. Carson, College of Charleston
    29 of 30

    Astronomers discovered a "super-Jupiter" (seen in the upper left of this image) around the bright star Kappa Andromedae. Designated Kappa Andromedae b, the new object has a mass about 12.8 times greater than Jupiter's. This places it on the dividing line that separates the most massive planets from the lowest-mass brown dwarfs.

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend
  • ESO
    30 of 30
    Next: 50 Must-See Weather Photos from 2012

    This image shows a part of a vast dark cloud of interstellar dust called the Pipe Nebula. The Pipe Nebula is a dark nebula consisting of clouds of interstellar dust so thick it can block out the light from the stars beyond. The Pipe Nebula appears silhouetted against the rich star clouds close to the centre of the Milky Way in the constellation of Ophiuchus (The Serpent Bearer).

    • share
      • Share on Tumblr
      • Pin It
      • Email to a friend

Comments

Add a Comment

Sign in »
*0 / 3000 Character Maximum
35

43 Comments

Filter by:
Hello Garet

Beautiful

Yesterday at 12:29 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
eraem12

very impressive pics. did anyone notice the pics that look like a close up of the human eye? funny how patterns repeat on a small to large level. Although i dont think they really know what they are seeing even with all their education. things that are well over 1000s years old how do you if it is the start, the middle or beginning? We are just now getting somewhat reliable equipment to observe these things.

Monday at 7:29 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
stettsr

It's like living inside of a Atom looking out! What a wonderful experiment that would be. Or is it and we just haven't figured it out yet?

Saturday at 12:44 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
bgarb

The world is an amazing place. Thanks for bringing it into our lives.

May 13 2013 at 9:17 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
PHOENIX ONE

Anyone else noticed the Wolf's (or Bear's) face in the Carina Nebula on the right? Turning the image upside down makes it more noticeable. :-)

April 27 2013 at 8:26 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
miiikesmarter

UH Moscovites are Very Powerful and Eta Carinae formed whats known as Effen Fusion. Notice the compounds being formed around the D-cloud

April 24 2013 at 7:01 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
miiikesmarter

THats wonderful photograph from space BUT nebulas have very small surfactant area..and bullcrap on that extra spending for GLobal "whatchamacallit"

April 24 2013 at 6:47 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
Katherine Snider

awesome!!

April 16 2013 at 12:09 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
Bob Larryfin

poooop

April 16 2013 at 12:03 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
alipa2000

That is amazing

March 21 2013 at 1:29 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply
Load more comments

In Case You Missed It

  • FEMA Chief: Feds Won't Go 'When the Cameras Leave'

    Officials will 'work aggressively' to help people find temporary housing

  • Weather Improves for Recovery Efforts in Moore, Okla.

    Drier, less humid air will push into the region Wednesday

  • Parents Face Tough Choice When Tornadoes Bear Down

    Seven elementary school students were killed in Monday's twister

  • Oklahoma Residents Come Home to Pick up the Pieces

    State and federal officials are working to provide aid and assistance

  • Power of Okla. Tornado Dwarfs Hiroshima Bomb

    Wind speeds were estimated at between 200 mph and 210 mph

More on SKYE

  • 25 Awe-Inspiring Photos from 2012
  • Holding Up the Moon: 23 Ridiculously Well-Posed Photos
  • 50 Must-See Weather Photos from 2012
  • 25 Indelible Images from Superstorm Sandy
  • Stunning Aerial Photos of New York City During Sandy
  • Winners of the 2012 National Geographic Photo Contest

From:AOL

  • KLEENEX WARNING!
  • WATCH: Teacher Uses Herself To Shield Students From Tornado
  • LOOK: Heroes Emerge After Tornadoes Sweep Oklahoma
  • Who's Smarter: The Selfish or the Generous?
  • Good News! 12 Inspiring Acts of Random Kindness

From: Mandatory

  • Man Takes Dump In Background Of Instructional Workout Video
  • Prison Life in America
  • Musicians Arrested For Weird Crimes
  • This Is How You Properly Prank Text People
  • Jessica Cribbon Has Fun Without Pants

From: Pawnation

  • Breaking Bad News With Baby Animals
  • South American 'Crazy' Ants Are a Threat in Southern US
  • Cat Returns From the 'Dead' in Case of Mistaken Identity
  • Adorable Kitten Freaked Out by Lizard
  • Okla. Tornado Survivor Finds Missing Dog During Live TV Interview

From:Amazing Planet

  • Unique Animals Found at East Coast Methane Seep
  • How Cirrus Clouds Form — And Why It Matters
  • New Deep-Sea Fish Species Found in Antarctica
  • Science and Psychology: Why People Ignore Tornado Warnings
  • Mexican Monolith Is World's Tallest Freestanding Rock

SKYE

  • Maps & Radar
  • Storm Center
  • News
  • Living
  • Video
  • My Cities
  • Most Popular:
    • • Dozens Killed in Oklahoma Tornado; Death Toll to Rise
    • • Twitter Photos Reveal Tornado Devastation in Moore, Okla.
    • • Photos: Tornadoes Wreak Havoc in Oklahoma and Beyond
    • • Watch: Kansas Meteorologist Seeks Shelter From Tornado
    • • Oldest Water on Earth Found Deep Underground
  • Most Recent:
    • • DIY Tornado Shelters Grow in Popularity
    • • FEMA Chief: Feds Won't Go 'When the Cameras Leave'
    • • Weather Improves for Recovery Efforts in Moore, Okla.
    • • Parents Face Tough Choice When Tornadoes Bear Down
    • • Oklahoma Residents Come Home to Pick up the Pieces
  • Follow Us

    Don't miss a single drop.

    • Follow @SkyeOnAOL
    • Google+
    Sign up here for newsletter

    Thanks! We suddenly see a newsletter in your forecast!
  • User Agreement
  • Privacy
  • Send Feedback
  • About Our Ads
  • Copyright Notice
  • Community Guidelines
  • Help & Feedback
  • About Us
  • Media/PR Inquiries

© 2013 AOL Inc. All Rights Reserved

BermanBraun