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Spitzer space telescope3/24/2023 ![]() ![]() You can't upload previous photos from your photo gallery, and there's no share button, so you'll have to share your photos to the #NASASelfie hashtag the good old-fashioned way - by going to your camera roll and sharing from there.Īlso, just a heads up, it only orients correctly in landscape, so if you take a photo holding your phone in portrait orientation, you're going to end up looking like a severed head floating in a spacesuit (as you can see, we had trouble correctly orienting doge in the cover pic). However, as this image (above) of the Phantom Galaxy shows, JWST is also proving a huge step forward when compared to its predecessor, the infrared-capable Spitzer Space Telescope, which was. While the magnetar itself is in the center of the image, it is not visible in infrared, but has. Mission engineers confirmed at about 2:30 p.m. You can then choose a background of some of the many space wonders imaged by Spitzer over the last 15 years, and save it to your phone. NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope snapped this infrared image of magnetar SGR 1900+14 in May 2008. After more than 16 years studying the universe in infrared light, revealing new wonders in our solar system, our galaxy and beyond, NASAs Spitzer Space Telescopes mission has come to an end. You snap a pic of your face (or someone else's face) centred in the frame, using the front or rear camera, and it's inserted into the helmet of an astronaut suit. It offered astronomers an unprecedented infrared view of the universe, allowing us to peer into regions of space that are hidden from optical telescopes with unprecedented clarity and sensitivity. To celebrate the 15th anniversary of the launch of the Spitzer Space Telescope, NASA has released a delightful NASA Selfies app for iOS and Android phones. The Spitzer Space Telescope, NASAs Great Observatory for infrared astronomy, was launched 2003 August 25 and is returning excellent scientific data from its. The Spitzer Space Telescope, launched in 2003, on a mission to become NASA’s premier infrared light observatory.
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