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  2. Gravastar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravastar

    Gravastar formation may provide an alternative explanation for sudden and intense gamma-ray bursts throughout space. [citation needed] LIGO's observations of gravitational waves from colliding objects have been found either to not be consistent with the gravastar concept, [8] [9] [10] or to be indistinguishable from ordinary black holes. [11] [12]

  3. Boötes Void - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boötes_Void

    A map of the Boötes Void. The Boötes Void (/ b oʊ ˈ oʊ t iː z / boh-OH-teez) (colloquially referred to as the Great Nothing) [1] is an approximately spherical region of space found in the vicinity of the constellation Boötes, containing only 60 galaxies instead of the 2,000 that should be expected from an area this large, hence its name.

  4. Quasar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quasar

    Artist's rendering of the accretion disc in ULAS J1120+0641, a very distant quasar containing a supermassive black hole with a mass two billion times that of the Sun [1] The Chandra X-ray image is of the quasar PKS 1127-145, a highly luminous source of X-rays and visible light about 10 billion light-years from Earth.

  5. Sombrero Galaxy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sombrero_Galaxy

    The Sombrero Galaxy (also known as Messier Object 104, M104 [4] or NGC 4594) is a peculiar galaxy of unclear classification [5] in the constellation borders of Virgo and Corvus, being about 9.55 megaparsecs (31.1 million light-years) [2] from the Milky Way galaxy.

  6. Blanet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blanet

    A blanet is a member of a hypothetical class of exoplanets that directly orbit black holes. [1]Blanets are fundamentally similar to other planets; they have enough mass to be rounded by their own gravity, but are not massive enough to start thermonuclear fusion and become stars.

  7. SpaceEngine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SpaceEngine

    Users can travel through space in any direction or at any speed and can move forwards or backwards in time. [4] SpaceEngine is currently in beta status. Up to version 0.9.8.0E, released in August 2017, it was available as freeware for Microsoft Windows. Version 0.990 beta, the first paid edition, was released on Steam in June 2019.

  8. Black holes in fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_holes_in_fiction

    The pulp-era motif of black holes posing danger to spacefarers resurfaced decades later following the popularization of black holes in fiction. [2] [3] In the 1975 Space: 1999 episode "Black Sun", one threatens to destroy the Moon as it travels through space; the episode was one of those included in Edwin Charles Tubb's 1975 novelization Breakaway.

  9. Extraterrestrial sky - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extraterrestrial_sky

    A historic extraterrestrial sky—Earthrise, the Earth viewed from the Moon.Taken by Apollo 8 astronaut William Anders while in lunar orbit, December 24, 1968.. In astronomy, an extraterrestrial sky is a view of outer space from the surface of an astronomical body other than Earth.