February 12, 2013
Continuing the posts on the glory of the Lord's vishwarūpa, isn't NASA's picture above, a wonderful representation of verse 11-14?
नभःस्पृशं दीप्तमनेकवर्णं व्यात्ताननं दीप्तविशालनेत्रम् | ११-२४ ।
nabhaḥspṛśaṁ dīptam anekavarṇaṁ vyāttānanaṁ dīptaviśālanetram 11-24
Your Form touching the sky, flaming in many colours, with mouths wide open, with large fiery eyes
The picture is sourced from NASA's Picture of Day website. According to the entry for March 23, 2009 (when the picture was published):
The Hubble telescope has truly morphed into the "divya chakshu" of astromers and astro-physicists. We are fortunate that NASA scientists take the trouble of posting breath-taking pictures of the cosmos everyday for the layman's delight. For other posts that source NASA's pictures and videos, click here.
Hari Om and Namaskaar until the next post
Continuing the posts on the glory of the Lord's vishwarūpa, isn't NASA's picture above, a wonderful representation of verse 11-14?
नभःस्पृशं दीप्तमनेकवर्णं व्यात्ताननं दीप्तविशालनेत्रम् | ११-२४ ।
nabhaḥspṛśaṁ dīptam anekavarṇaṁ vyāttānanaṁ dīptaviśālanetram 11-24
Your Form touching the sky, flaming in many colours, with mouths wide open, with large fiery eyes
The picture is sourced from NASA's Picture of Day website. According to the entry for March 23, 2009 (when the picture was published):
It may look like a grazing seahorse, but the dark object toward the image right is actually a pillar of smoky dust about 20 light years long. The curiously-shaped dust structure occurs in our neighboring Large Magellanic Cloud, in a star forming region very near the expansive Tarantula Nebula. The energetic nebula is creating a star cluster, NGC 2074, whose center is visible just off the top of the image in the direction of the neck of the seahorse. The representative color image was taken last year by the Hubble Space Telescope's Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 in honor of Hubble's 100,000th trip around the Earth. As young stars in the cluster form, their light and winds will slowly erode the dust pillars away over the next million years.
The Hubble telescope has truly morphed into the "divya chakshu" of astromers and astro-physicists. We are fortunate that NASA scientists take the trouble of posting breath-taking pictures of the cosmos everyday for the layman's delight. For other posts that source NASA's pictures and videos, click here.
Hari Om and Namaskaar until the next post
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