July 7, 2010
Smile!
Fresh! off the press. What is special about this image? or tell us what this picture is supposed to be of?
Hint: 6.626068 × 10-34 m2 kg / s
Cracked by: Raghuvansh , vijayaraghavan , shrik , udupendra , Ananth , Aparna , Logik , dineshk , Sumanth Patlolla , Gurupad , Rogi , Qbrain , lanu , Thejas V R , Rahulk , Rahul Rajeev , Dibyo , Bharath , krudebox , SV , Amar Peluri , Manish Achuth , dhruv sharma , Vivek , umang , Sudhanva Sreesha and Shwetha Maiya
Answer:
Picture of “the entire universe” taken by ESA’s Planck telescope.
Obvious guess – the Universe.
sky map from the planck telescope
The European Space Agency has released what it says is the first-ever image of the entire universe which will give scientists new insight into how the stars and galaxies form.
The all-sky image, produced by space telescope Planck, can also tell how the universe itself came to life after the Big Bang some 13.7 billion years ago.
photo of the entire universe
Milky way and the space around it, captured by Planck. Shows cosmic background radiation left behind from Big Bang.
Planck Telescope’s map of the Universe
Planck Telescope’s first image of the entire universe, with a milkyway-centric system
The Cosmic Microwave Background map of the Universe as seen by the Planck telescope.
“All-Sky” map released on Monday, courtesy of the European Space Agency’s Planck satellite mission.
The satellite will produce four scans of the entire sky, scheduled for final release in 2012, mapping the microwave emissions reaching Earth from our own Milky Way galaxy and the universe beyond.
planck’s picture of the universe
It’s the first complete image from the Planck space telescope of “the universe”. At least from a “cosmic microwave background” perspective
This picture is the first all-sky image from
European space agency’s ‘Planck space observatory’
which was sent into space in 2009 to survey the “oldest light” in the cosmos.
The image, Planck’s first scan, shows ‘the structure and form of dust clouds within about 500 light-years of the sun. The bright band in this is the Milky Way’s spiral disk.
The European Space Agency (ESA) Planck telescope’s first complete image of the cosmic microwave background (CMB). The CMB is a ubiquitous glow produced by photons created at the formation of the Universe around 13.7 billion years ago.
Picture of the Universe. The Milky Way in the centre. Taken by the Planck Space Telescope.
The picture of our Milky Way using COBE satellite
The first ever image of the entire UNIVERSE taken by the Planck Telescope.
first full sky map of the cosmic microwave background from the Planck Telescope
The entire image of the universe
Picture of the Universe. From the European Space Agency.
this is the pic of the mass distribution across the universe
Microwave radiation map of the universe from the Planck satellite, the blue light being the dust while the bright region is the cosmic radiation
The Universe in a single pic.
all sky map, released by the European Space agency’s Planck mission.
its the all-sky image taken by the Planck telescope
The first picture prolly of the Universe. Taken by Planck Telescope.
universe
This is definitely an X-Ray image of the whole Universe we live in!
This is how the entire universe looks