'God's hand' in the universe

The Chandra telescope of the US Aerospace Agency (NASA) captures an image like a giant hand reaching towards the stars.

The Chandra telescope of the US Aerospace Agency (NASA) captures an image like a giant hand reaching towards the stars.

Picture 1 of 'God's hand' in the universe

"The hand of God" is created by the energy of a planet.Photo: NASA.


The recorded image is like a giant hand with open fingers. It is made up of a metaphor (a super-dense star, spinning rapidly and releasing much energy into the surrounding space). This metaphor is about 17,000 light-years from Earth and is "hiding" in the palm. Metaphors have a diameter of about 19.2 million km, but the nebula (cloud of gas dust) that it produces has a length of up to 150 light-years.

NASA's Chandra telescope - orbiting 576 km from the surface of the globe - captures the "hand of God" image from the X-ray that it emits. The Chandra telescope's mission is to capture areas of high energy density in the universe, such as the remains of exploding stars.

The red and yellow rays in the image are part of a nearby cloud of gas and dust. They are energized by the flow of electrons and ions that the hidden crystal blows out. The colors of the image are created by energy concentration density. For example, areas with the highest X-ray density emit blue.

Metaphysics form when ordinary stars run out of fuel and collapse into. Most metaphors have 1.35 to 2.1 times the mass of the sun. They are heavier than white dwarfs and are lighter than black holes. The hidden crystals turned very quickly right after forming. Rotation speed increases gradually as it shrinks. A newly-born horoscope can spin in a range from 1/700 to 30 seconds.

Update 17 December 2018
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