The most outstanding cosmic photos last week

Look back at the most beautiful and outstanding photos selected by National Geographic last week.

Picture 1 of The most outstanding cosmic photos last week
Giant cacti like touching the stars in the sky in a photo taken at Isla de Pescado cactus island in the salt field in Salar de Uyuni, Bolivia. Salar is the largest field in the world with an area of ​​more than 8,028 km 2 belonging to the Andean plateau and 3,600m higher than the sea level. NASA said, some isolated islands in this salt desert are made up of reefs and covered with volcanic rocks.

Picture 2 of The most outstanding cosmic photos last week
This is a picture of the dazzling dust and gas tendons that shine prominently in the sky so that NASA has captured recently. The spacecraft's ability to observe ultraviolet rays has helped scientists in studying the matter in space about ten billion years ago. At 1500 light-years from Earth, the Cygnus constellation, the swan-like nebula, is the remnant of a supernova explosion that occurred some 5,000 to 8,000 years ago. This light is quite thin because its gas is still being heated by the pulse waves from the stellar explosion.

Picture 3 of The most outstanding cosmic photos last week
This image was obtained from Planet Searcher (HARPS) High Accuracy Radial telescope (HARPS) of the European Space Research Organization in the Southern Hemisphere, showing the image of three red dwarfs including a star named Gliese 667C (left) is called 'super Earth' and two smaller and softer stars than the sun (right) are surrounded by a rocky area. Thanks to HARPS spectrometer, this center has discovered many alien planets in space.

Picture 4 of The most outstanding cosmic photos last week
The image of the constellation stars 'sparkling stars' reveals the diffuse region of dust, the gas of the Cone Nebula is captured by an astronomer in Australia. Known as NGC 2264, this constellation and nebula are about 2,700 light-years away from the constellation Monoceros (unicorn).

Picture 5 of The most outstanding cosmic photos last week
Like a crack of time and space, infrared light of the spiral galaxy NGC 891 is seen from the earth and it seems that this image is restricted to the Spitzer telescope image. .

Picture 6 of The most outstanding cosmic photos last week
The surface of Mars became a color riot in a new photograph taken in the Nili Fossae area from NASA's Mars observing spacecraft. In close-up, we can see the colors created by the ancient impact process. Each mineral has a different color and makes the stone look like a melted rainbow.

Picture 7 of The most outstanding cosmic photos last week
The spiral galaxy NGC 2683 seems to be flying like a flying saucer and is nicknamed the UFO galaxy in a recent photo taken from the Hubble telescope. Found in 1788, the galaxy looked horizontally in a structure very similar to the Miky Way galaxy, helping scientists better study the structure of the spiral-like dust traces created from large cores. of the galaxy.

Picture 8 of The most outstanding cosmic photos last week
Hodgkins crater on Mercury has brought a great image from the inside.