The Radio Sky
. J. Condon, J. J. Broderick, and G. A. Seielstad · Download full size image
This composite picture shows the radio sky above an optical photograph of the NRAO site in Green Bank, WV. The former 300 Foot Telescope (the large dish standing between the three 85 foot interferometer telescopes and the 140 Foot Telescope) made the 4.85 GHz radio image, which is about 45 degrees wide. Increasing radio brightness is indicated by lighter shades to indicate how the sky would appear to someone with a "radio eye" 300 feet in diameter.
The optical and radio skies reveal "parallel universes" containing quite different objects. The extended radio sources concentrated in a band from the lower left to upper right lie in the outer Milky Way. The brightest irregular sources are clouds of hydrogen ionized by luminous stars. Such stars quickly exhaust their nuclear fuel, collapse, and explode as supernovae, whose remnants appear as faint radio rings. Posted on: 04 Nov, 2003
- Hubble Space Telescope
- Chandra X-ray Observatory
- Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory
- ROSAT X-ray Observatory
- SOHO Solar Observatory
- WMAP
- 2MASS Sky Survey
- ASTER Earth Imaging Instrument
- MISR Earth Imaging Instrument
- NRAO Gallery
- NAOJ Subaru Telescope
- Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX)
- European Southern Observatory (ESO)
- Wide-Field Imager (WFI)
- SOFI Infrared Multi-mode Instrument
- Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT)
- New Technology Telescope (NTT)
- Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX)
- SOHO Daily Images - 1996
- Spitzer Space Telescope (SIRTF)
- Infrared Legacy Gallery
Latest Thoughts
Do Drugs Turn Kids Bad?
USDA Develops Preschool Food Pyramid
Girl Lives Four Months Without a Heart
Stopping Sinkholes and Street Floods
Tai Chi Helps Asthma Sufferers
Fall is Worst Season for Asthma Outbreaks

































RSS Feeds