Anonymous
(ID: Y7aTf0kh)
8/23/2025, 7:28:26 AM
No.513767317
>>513767996
>>513770388
>>513770936
>>513771940
>>513772095
>>513772097
>>513773383
>>513773758
>>513775881
>>513778253
>>513780738
>>513782348
>>513787705
>>513790115
>>513790262
NASA took a picture of massive explosion in space!
THIS PICTURE shows the explosion and how all went silent afterwards, the star is gone. Notice how it looks like lens flare filter effect made with Adobe Photoshop Windows program, this is a coincidence, sometimes real life imitates computer image processing software.
https://www.mtvuutiset.fi/artikkeli/nasa-kuvasi-valtavan-rajahdyksen-70-miljoonan-valovuoden-paassa/9209218
Picture 1 was taken in 2024 when the star exploded in a massive explosion which lasted 33 minutes. Picture 2 was taken in 2025 exactly a year later, there is nothing visibly left from the exploded star.
It was a supergiant star.
This light has travelled 65 million years to Earth.
The star actually died at the same time as dinosaurs died on Earth but we only saw the flash of light in 2024 altough it happened 65 million years ago, such are the distances in space and limits of speed of light.
Both images were published yesterday, NASA wanted to wait one year so they could publish a fresh image of the same region of space next to the one where explosion was ongoing.
https://www.mtvuutiset.fi/artikkeli/nasa-kuvasi-valtavan-rajahdyksen-70-miljoonan-valovuoden-paassa/9209218
Picture 1 was taken in 2024 when the star exploded in a massive explosion which lasted 33 minutes. Picture 2 was taken in 2025 exactly a year later, there is nothing visibly left from the exploded star.
It was a supergiant star.
This light has travelled 65 million years to Earth.
The star actually died at the same time as dinosaurs died on Earth but we only saw the flash of light in 2024 altough it happened 65 million years ago, such are the distances in space and limits of speed of light.
Both images were published yesterday, NASA wanted to wait one year so they could publish a fresh image of the same region of space next to the one where explosion was ongoing.