
Astronomer Edwin Hubble peers though the eyepiece of the 100-inch Hooker telescope at California’s Mt. Wilson Observatory. Originally published in the November 8, 1937, issue of LIFEin the first quarter of the 20th century the handsome, self-mythologizing, egotistical and brilliant astronomer Edwin Powell Hubble was world famous for what he discovered while peering through an earlier, land-based telescope: namely, that we are not alone. Or rather, that our galaxy is not alone.
Photograph by Margaret Bourke-White.

This is Pismis 24-1 (HDE 319718), a region with spectacular diversity, beginning with its open cluster of neighboring stars, called Pismis 24. Together, they are centrally located within the diffuse nebula NGC 6357, which is located approximately 8,150 light-years from Earth in the constellation of Scorpius.

Cassini Reveals Sunny Seas on Titan
As it flew past Saturn’s large moon Titan recently, NASA’s Cassini spacecraft caught a glimpse of bright sunlight reflecting off hydrocarbon seas. This color mosaic image is actually in “near-infrared” light meaning it is not the natural color the human eye would see. The unaided human eye would see nothing but haze so by using this wavelength it allows scientists to breakthrough and collect much more information.(Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona/University of Idaho)

