This week in Nantes: n°669 | canyons, by submillimetre ↦ ROU
More → submillimetre.com More → oripeau.art Submit → oripeau.art/submit Playlist → open.spotify.com/playlist/4R7PXexzD8ifWlzb7YiH76
This project is supported by jba.archi

seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from Lithuania
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Belgium

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Australia
seen from Canada
seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from South Korea

seen from Canada
seen from Yemen
This week in Nantes: n°669 | canyons, by submillimetre ↦ ROU
More → submillimetre.com More → oripeau.art Submit → oripeau.art/submit Playlist → open.spotify.com/playlist/4R7PXexzD8ifWlzb7YiH76
This project is supported by jba.archi
La battaglia di San Romano IV Teodor Tudorica | @submillimetre www.instagram.com/submillimetre
La battaglia di San Romano IV Teodor Tudorica | @submillimetre www.instagram.com/submillimetre
La battaglia di San Romano IV Teodor Tudorica | @submillimetre www.instagram.com/submillimetre
This week in Nantes: n°669 | canyons, by submillimetre ↦ ROU
More → submillimetre.com More → oripeau.art Submit → oripeau.art/submit Playlist → open.spotify.com/playlist/4R7PXexzD8ifWlzb7YiH76
This project is supported by jba.archi
This week in Nantes: n°669 | canyons, by submillimetre ↦ ROU
More → submillimetre.com More → oripeau.art Submit → oripeau.art/submit Playlist → open.spotify.com/playlist/4R7PXexzD8ifWlzb7YiH76
This project is supported by jba.archi
This week in Nantes: n°669 | canyons, by submillimetre ↦ ROU
More → submillimetre.com More → oripeau.art Submit → oripeau.art/submit Playlist → open.spotify.com/playlist/4R7PXexzD8ifWlzb7YiH76
This project is supported by jba.archi
New map of the Milky Way is complete; reveals our galaxy’s future stars
“Earth has a few narrow "windows," however, where the atmospheric gases allow light of particular wavelength ranges to penetrate. Rather than needing to go to space to map the Universe, we can build ground based telescopes and arrays capable of gathering far more light than a space-based observatory.”
Each time you look at a photograph of the Universe, you aren't just seeing it as it was at a particular moment in time, but also in a particular wavelength (or set of wavelengths) of light! Different wavelengths can reveal different phenomena and components of the Universe, from dust and gas to starlight, plasma, black holes and beyond. Recently, the ATLASGAL collaboration, using the Atacama Pathfinder EXperiment (APEX) telescope, a 12-meter sub-millimetre dish atop a 5,100 meter Chilean Plateau, completed their map of the southern Milky Way. Spanning more than 400 square degrees, it is the most accurate map of our galaxy in this wavelength of all time, even defeating maps created in space.
Go view the whole remarkable thing in pictures, videos and no more than 200 words on today's Mostly Mute Monday.