The Mesmerising Photos of Milky Way You’ve Never Seen Before
The Milky Way is a disk about 120,000 light years across, with a central bulge that has a diameter of 12,000 light years. As seen from The Himalayas mountains. Photo by: Anton Jankovoy
The disk is far from perfectly flat though, as can be seen in the picture below. What warped it? Two of the galaxy’s neighbors – the Large and Small Magellanic clouds. Photo by: Dave Morrow
The Milky Way has a halo of dark matter that makes up over 90% of its mass. That means that all of what we can see (with the naked eye or telescopes) makes up less than 10% of the mass of the Milky Way. Photo by: Elmar Akhmetov
Milky Way over Idaho, USA. As galaxies go, the Milky Way is a middleweight with 200 billion stars. Photo by: unknown
You may not think so by looking at it, but the Milky Way is full of dust and gas. Milky Wat over forest. Photo by: Marius Kasteckas
Milky Way over Catherine hills bay, Australia. The Milky Way wasn’t always as it is today, a beautiful barred spiral. It became its current size and shape by eating up other galaxies. Photo by: unknown
Milky Way over Tyrol Mountains, Austria. We can’t take a picture of the Milky Way from above (yet) because we are inside the galactic disk, about 26,000 light years from the galactic center. Photo by: Michi B
Milky Way and northern light together in one photo. Photo by: Iurie Belegurschi
Beautiful photograph of Milky Way over El Castillo pyramid at night, Mexico. Photo by: Piotr Nikiel
Milky way over mount Fuji, Japan. Photo by: unknown
A computer generated image of how would Milky Way looked like as seen from space. Photo by: NASA | edited