Comments
sodo9987 t1_ixz870n wrote
Yup that’s gonna be a poster on my wall. Right next to my JWTS poster of the pillars of creation.
SchleppyJ4 t1_iy42yqb wrote
Ooo where can one get one of these posters??
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Riegel_Haribo t1_ixzc0vv wrote
This is no official release, she writes "credits" like that to give herself false impression of association on her Photoshops of misregistered products.
Plow_King t1_ixzkmib wrote
so it's not "real"?
Riegel_Haribo t1_ixzlf4y wrote
It's as "real" as the half dozen that came before in /r/jameswebb.
.. Except with sharpening that surrounds stars with nebula-sucking black rings (greyscale is raw imaging): https://i.imgur.com/dBYr1Eb.gif
Plow_King t1_ixzm4zt wrote
ok, that's kind of what i meant. thanks for the info and the new sub!
RiseFit1638 t1_ixzsazw wrote
Are those planets really a deep blue? Or is that just added?
Riegel_Haribo t1_ixztz2q wrote
Because James Webb Space Telescope observes infrared light, here, a very deep mid-infrared, it is impossible to tell the actual color they would appear. For those appearing quite red, it is likely objects (not planets) are invisible to visible light or even Hubble.
If the image was composed maintaining spectral accuracy and calibration of the different wavelengths assembled to make color, blue would imply that there is more shortwave light flux (the end closer to visible light) than seen in longer wavelengths..
The red giant Betelgeuse, for example, emits most of its light in visible red, not down into deep infrared, so it appears blue in a transposed spectrum.
Very distant galaxies might even appear purple (blue + red) or green, from addition of searing ultraviolet brightness and the dust swirling around young stars, shifted into infrared by the expansion of the universe.
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ALetterAloof t1_ixzrc1h wrote
Wait so Judy Schmidt isn’t an engineer/photographer, just a photoshopper? I’m confused
Riegel_Haribo t1_ixzsdu6 wrote
Profile here (with widely circulated "Jupiter aurora" made of telescope diffraction artifacts)
RaifRedacted t1_ixzzu0i wrote
Nice article. Basically just explains she's one of any number of people applying filters to data NASA provides, only she's also one of the few NASA has acknowledged with her JWST work. Beautiful photo. A bit too much like water for me, though.
ALetterAloof t1_iy0mq45 wrote
Thank you! Explains it well with your link.
LesbianLipReader t1_ixzv322 wrote
I'm not very well informed on the behind the scenes stuff going on around JWST images, but you seem to be based on your comments.
Is there a publicly available place on the internet where I could find the raw data/images produced by the JWST, that you know of? I imagine it will be mostly incomprehensible to me, but I'm curious to learn more about what the Telescope is capturing before it's been curated or edited or otherwise interpreted for the public.
Riegel_Haribo t1_ixzztab wrote
I created a post to give you a behind the scenes look at what the uncalibrated and "raw" imagery can look like, and even that is processed to make it presentable on the screen.
The science instruments of the telescope, when they are used for imaging or otherwise, capture a very large dynamic range of light, from a single photon strike to the brightness of Jupiter, in a single wavelength passband at a time (aka black-and-white). Multiple data products can be contained in a FITS data file, sometimes hundreds of groups of integrations in some low levels of "raw". Some manual intervention is needed to at least set the brightness contour and background to highlight the observation target.
All public Western space telescope data is published on the STScI MAST portal (or the ESA equivalent), where one must make queries of the database, know what science program you are interested in, know the instruments and modes, data pipeline products, etc. A random hot-off-the-presses image might leave you merely whelmed, if you don't know the science behind it.
LesbianLipReader t1_iy015lq wrote
Thanks so much for the thorough reply! I appreciate it a lot. I'm saving this comment so I can come back to it. I'm very grateful.
value_added_bullshit t1_iy05chc wrote
Original Flickr account for this photo.
>NGC 1566
>NASA / ESA / CSA / Judy Schmidt >The latest view of another dusty spiral galaxy from JWST's MIRI. Took a bit of doing this time because the pipeline images available from the archive had a lot of alignment issues. I had to manually mosaic this. Luckily it wasn't too difficult, or at least my human brain handled it fine. Not sure what is so confounding to a computer brain. >Red (screen layer mode): MIRI F2100W >Orange: MIRI F1130W >Cyan: MIRI F770W >Extra overall brightness in grayscale: MIRI F1000W >North is 1.5° counter-clockwise from up.
Quasar9111 t1_ixz238i wrote
reminds me of the ship scene in 1899
awesome photo
Famous-Side5578 t1_ixziy3t wrote
haha, i swear i had the same thought. had to double check what sub i was scrolling past.
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Decronym t1_iy0220m wrote
Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I've seen in this thread:
|Fewer Letters|More Letters| |-------|---------|---| |CSA|Canadian Space Agency| |ESA|European Space Agency| |JWST|James Webb infra-red Space Telescope|
^(2 acronyms in this thread; )^(the most compressed thread commented on today)^( has 7 acronyms.)
^([Thread #8357 for this sub, first seen 27th Nov 2022, 18:57])
^[FAQ] ^([Full list]) ^[Contact] ^([Source code])
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NomadOfNet t1_iy2ugiu wrote
That's amazing. Hopefully it becomes another iconic image of space.
mann5151 t1_iy2y8ie wrote
What every galaxy looks like from the top, they're not flat the way we're kinda taught, they spiral and travel forward, like a spinning bullet
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jasonrubik t1_iy5hxvg wrote
I'm determined to believe that JWST = Judy's Wonderful Schmidt Telescope!
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TheBurninator99 t1_iy4qbvx wrote
Visit Kepler Clothing & Merch's shop, for cool artwork on awesome products! https://www.redbubble.com/people/Trogdor99/shop
Caleb-Rentpayer t1_iy1wbck wrote
This is essentially just "art" considering how much processing goes into a picture like this. It just highlights certain existing features from raw data in an aesthetically pleasing way. It's cool, but the only way this object would ever look like this is with human modification.
Evcher t1_ixyw0z5 wrote
Absolutely incredible photo. JWST is an engineering marvel