Whenever you observe an object, you aren't viewing it in its present state.
When one of Jupiter's moons passes behind our Solar System's largest planet, it falls into the ... [+]
Robert J. Modic
Instead, we're held back while light travels through space.
As shown here, the International Space Station flies over a spectacular aurora on display in Earth's ... [+]
NASA / INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION
Visible artificial satellites appear as they were ~1-2 milliseconds ago.
Whether seen with the naked eye or with modern telescopes, the light from Uranus takes approximately ... [+]
ESO
The farthest naked eye Solar System object, Uranus, is 2 hours and 40 minutes in the past.
The two sun-like stars, Alpha Centauri A and B, are located just 4.37 light years away from us and ... [+]
ESA/Hubble & NASA
The closest stars, in Alpha Centauri’s system, are ~4.3 light-years away; there, it’s early 2016 on Earth.
Canopus, normally visible from the Southern Hemisphere, is seen here from the International Space ... [+]
NASA / ISS expedition 6
The second brightest star, Canopus, sees a pre-Industrial Revolution Earth: 310 light-years distant.
The three bright stars of the Summer Triangle: Vega (at top), Deneb (at left), and Altair (at ... [+]
NASA, ESA; Credit: A. Fujii
Deneb, anchoring the Summer Triangle, appears as it did 2,615 years ago; Athenian Democracy is a century away.
The Carina Nebula, with Eta Carina, the brightest star inside it, on the left. What appears to be a ... [+]
ESO/IDA/Danish 1.5 m/R.Gendler, J-E. Ovaldsen, C. Thöne, and C. Feron
Eta Carinae, 7,500 light-years away, witnesses the Black Sea’s flooding.
The constellation of Cassiopeia is familiar to casual skywatchers as a big "W" in the sky, but in ... [+]
A. FUJII; annotations by E. Siegel
The oldest naked-eye starlight arrives from V762 Cassiopeiae, 16,300 years old: when humans first entered North America.
A map of the nearest globular clusters surrounding the Milky Way's center. A few of the globular ... [+]
William E. Harris / McMaster U., and Larry McNish / RASC Calgary
Numerous visible globular star clusters are farther, with Messier 3 the most distant.
Messier 3, a globular cluster located 33,900 light-years away, as seen through a 24" telescope. The ... [+]
Adam Block/Mount Lemmon SkyCenter/University of Arizona
It’s 33,900 light-years away, corresponding to the final demise of Earth’s Neanderthals.
The location of globular cluster Messier 3, near the Big Dipper (top) and Arcturus (bottom). If you ... [+]
E. Siegel / Stellarium
Galaxies outdistance all other visible objects.
The largest galaxy in the Local Group, Andromeda, appears small and insignificant next to the Milky ... [+]
ScienceTV on YouTube / Screenshot
The Triangulum galaxy even bests Andromeda: 2.8 million light-years away, predating Homo Habilis.
The Triangulum galaxy might not be as massive or impressive as ourselves or Andromeda, but it's the ... [+]
Robert Gendler, Subaru Telescope (NAOJ)
Only temporary, transient events are farther.
This dual image shows the emission of GRB 080319B, imaged by Swift's X-ray Telescope (L) and, later, ... [+]
NASA/Swift/Stefan Immler, et al.
Gamma-ray burst GRB 080319B was visible for ~30 seconds on March 19, 2008.
The distant galaxy EGC 1305123, seen in optical light (L) and ionized carbon monoxide (R), as imaged ... [+]
ESA/Hubble & NASA; Tacconi et al. (2010), Nature 463, 781
7.5 billion light-years away, its light predates Earth’s existence by ~3 billion years.
An illustration of the young solar system Beta Pictoris, somewhat analogous to our own Solar System ... [+]
AVI M. MANDELL, NASA
Mostly Mute Monday tells an astronomical story in images, visuals, and no more than 200 words. Talk less; smile more.
#News | https://sciencespies.com/news/how-far-back-in-time-can-we-see-with-our-naked-eye/
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