Photo # 2 (Dec 2009)
GREAT OBSERVATORIES EXPLORE
GALACTIC CENTER
I am done with great things and big plans, great
institutions and big successes. I am for those tiny, invisible loving human
forces that work from individual to individual, creeping through the crannies
of the world like so many rootlets, or like the capillary oozing of water, yet
which, if given time, will rend the hardest monuments of human pride.
- William James

Credit: NASA, ESA,
SSC, CXC, and STScI
Where can
a telescope take you? Four hundred years ago, a telescope took Galileo to the Moon to discover
craters, to Saturn
to discover rings, to Jupiter
to discover moons, to Venus
to discover phases, and to the Sun to discover
spots. Today, in celebration of Galileo's telescopic achievements and as part
of the International Year of Astronomy,
NASA has used its entire fleet of Great Observatories,
and the Internet,
to bring the center of our Galaxy to you. Pictured
above, in greater detail and in more colors than ever seen before, are the
combined images of the Hubble
Space Telescope in near-infrared light, the Spitzer Space Telescope
in infrared light, and the Chandra
X-ray Observatory in X-ray light. A menagerie of vast star fields is visible,
along with dense star clusters, long filaments of gas and dust, expanding
supernova remnants, and the energetic surroundings
of what likely is our Galaxy's
central black hole. Many of these features are labeled on a complementary
annotated image. Of course, a telescope's
magnification and light-gathering ability create only an image of what a human
could see if visiting these places. To actually go requires rockets.
One must wonder what information might be brought back from psychic explorations of our wider universe. Intuitives have been shown to be accurate in remote viewing, to the point that the military has found them helpful in identifying facilities that were otherwise inaccessible. What information might such psychics bring back from explorations of distant planets, stars, galaxies and nebulae?
Dan Benor, MD