Do you love Christmas trees and galaxy clusters? Then you will love the new image of MACS0416, a galaxy cluster that looks like a festive tree in the sky. This image was created by combining infrared observations from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope with visible-light data from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope. It is one of the most detailed and comprehensive views of a galaxy cluster ever taken. In this video, we will explain how this image was made, what it shows, and why it is important for our understanding of the early universe. We will also explore the phenomenon of gravitational lensing, which creates multiple images of the same galaxy that appear as ornaments on the tree. Join us as we celebrate the wonders of the cosmos with the cosmic Christmas tree of MACS0416.
Chapters:
00:00 Introduction
01:29 The New image of MACS0416
04:11 The new image’s main features
06:47 Implications and significance of the new image
08:44 Outro
09:01 Enjoy
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#NSN #galaxy cluster #christmas tree #MACS0416 #James Webb #Hubble #space #astronomy #cosmos #universe #gravitational lensing #star formation #cosmology #dark matter #Frontier Fields #panchromatic image #infrared #visible light #transient objects #galaxy evolution #galaxy formation #NASA #Astronomy
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