Click on image for full-size version
WIYN image of a northern section of M101, made from a combination of red (R) and
almost-infrared (I) bands, displayed using false color.
Credit: Mike Pierce, John Jurcevic (Indiana)/WIYN/NOAO/NSF
Click on image for full-size version
WIYN image of a southern section of M101, made from a combination of red (R) and
almost-infrared (I) bands, displayed using false color.
Credit: Mike Pierce, John Jurcevic (Indiana)/WIYN/NOAO/NSF
Gorgeous image of the giant Pinwheel Galaxy, M101, in Ursa Major. This spiral
galaxy, of type Sc, is probably quite similar to our own
Milky Way Galaxy. It is seen almost face-on, showing the
spiral arms and the intervening dust lanes (dark filaments) with great clarity
in this 1975 image from the Kitt Peak 4-meter Mayall telescope.
Credit: AURA/NOAO/NSF
The spiral galaxy M101 imaged by the NOAO Mosaic camera at the Kitt Peak Mayall
4-meter telescope by George Jacoby. The camera contains eight CCD imagers for a
total of 8192 pixels square.
Credit: AURA/NOAO/NSF
Click on image for full-size version
Face-on spiral galaxy M101 was imaged by Dr George Jacoby at the Kitt Peak
National Observatory's 0.9-meter telescope, using the new wide-field imaging system
Mosaic. This instrument combines the pictures from eight separate CCD chips,
carefully mounted next to each other for a total of 8192 pixels square, and can
thus image a large area without sacrificing resolution.
Credit: George Jacoby, Bruce Bohannan, Mark Hanna/AURA/NOAO/NSF
Last Modification: 18 Apr 2001