A new exhibition, which opens on Friday June 7, will give its viewers an experience through space and time.
The visual trip hosted at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London, will show off images of the earliest shots of the Moon to the classic star trails from Earth.
But this is not just a exhibition of extremely awesome pictures. The “event” and photographs cover the influence of astronomers through time and honour men like Galileo.
Here are some of the images one can expect to see.
Above: Andromeda Galaxy – images that can be taken today with improvements in telescope and photography.
First look at the far side of the moon in 1959.
Buzz Aldrin on the Moon, 20 July 1969 – taken by Neil Armstrong.
This image was taken in 2005 and is of the Hyperion – one of Saturn’s strangest and greatest 60 moons.
The Crab Nebula (debris from a ‘supernova’ explosion) in 2005.
This image taken in 2005, shows how “image-processing techniques” can further studies by highlighting things that sometimes cannot be seen.
Star Trail taken in Australia by Ted Dobosz in 2009.
[Source: Daily Mail]
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