Thursday, 29 September 2016

Stop Complaining about 'Fake' Colors in NASA Images

By Paul Sutter, The Ohio State University

This gorgeous photo of the famous Crab Nebula combines an infrared view from ESA's Herschel Space Observatory with an optical image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope.
Credit: ESA/Herschel/PACS/MESS Key Programme Supernova Remnant Team; NASA, ESA and Allison Loll/Jeff Hester (Arizona State University)


A light bucket

I think it's first important to describe what a telescope is doing, especially a telescope with a digital camera attached. The telescope itself is an arrangement of tubes, mirrors and/or lenses that enable the instrument to capture as much light as possible. Obviously, it pulls in much more light than the human eye does, or it wouldn't be very good at what it was built to do. So, naturally, telescopes will see really faint things — things you'd never see with your eyes unless you hitched a ride on a wandering rogue exoplanet and settled in for a million-year cruise.

The colors of the universe

Superhero senses

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