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Sky Candy Destination Moon

Win McNamee/Pool Photo via AP

I'm feeling a bit retro today, so let's have some jazz.

You all have probably heard that Elon Musk is targeting a Moon colony before the Mars colony. The interesting part to me is that he is talking about an economic model for a Moon colony, which I'm going to write about more in due course. But in the meantime...

Part of that economic model is the observation that it is orders of magnitude cheaper to build satellites, like Musk's data center satellites, on the moon and deliver them to Earth than to launch them from Earth. Things are going to get interesting.

Some things are already interesting.

Andromeda, for instance.

If I ask Grok for more details, will it be Cliff's notes?

I think we've done the Tarantula Nebula before, but this is cool.

JWST is primarily an infrared telescope, but Hubble can manage at least near infrared, to good effect.

Olaf Stapleton wrote a book called Star Maker. I liked it a lot. But this is a real star maker.

The blue stars here are youngsters too.

I remember pictures of the Cat's Eye Nebula in my textbook when I took astronomy a million years ago. It was nothing like this.

Some flashy excitement this week.

Now, this is pretty cool, if not very showy. There are parts of the universe that have almost no stars for millions of light-years. But they're not completely empty. Space telescopes are letting us see that there are stars even in the voids, often for the first time.

Some picture postcards from far away.

Boom.

A lot of what the space telescopes are showing us is using light from different frequencies, so that the images are new and quite beautiful.

More baby pictures.

And a few more.

Let's finish up with a view from above.

My cat is absolutely determined to keep me from working. But I defeated him temporarily. And that's it for this week. Come back next week for more Sky Candy.

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