Jewels of the Night
The stars of the milky way galaxy glow above Blacktooth Mountain at 1AM on a July night. From most places, clouds are easily visible at night because they are lit up by light pollution underneath. But under a sky this dark, you can't see the clouds. You only notice the absence of stars as a cloud passes by. These thin clouds gave halos to the brighter stars and planets. The bright red object on the right is Mars. To the left in the constellation Scorpius is the red supergiant star Antares. The name in Greek means "like-Mars" since it's a similar color, and often the same brightness as the red planet. Just above that is Saturn, the 2nd brightest object in the picture.
- Copyright
- Kevin Palmer
- Image Size
- 5596x3731 / 12.9MB
- Keywords
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bighorn mountains, wyoming, summer, 2016, nikon d750, kevin palmer, july, night, sky, stars, starry, astronomy, astrophotography, space, dark, milky way, galaxy, blacktooth mountain, mars, saturn, clouds, halos
- Contained in galleries
- Wyoming, Night Sky