APOD Next: the Coming NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day Before it Goes Live. Please be Kind and Share with Proper Care.

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Next APOD: 2009 November 1 -The Average Color of the Universe

APOD Next the Coming NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day

APOD: 2009 November 1 -The Average Color of the Universe

ap091101_html

The Average Color of the Universe
Credit: Karl Glazebrook & Ivan Baldry (JHU)

Explanation: What color is the universe? More precisely, if the entire sky was smeared out, what color would the final mix be? This whimsical question came up when trying to determine what stars are commonplace in nearby galaxies. The answer, depicted above, is a conditionally perceived shade of beige. To determine this, astronomers computationally averaged the light emitted by one of the largest sample of galaxies yet analyzed: the 200,000 galaxies of the 2dF survey. The resulting cosmic spectrum has some emission in all parts of the electromagnetic spectrum, but a single perceived composite color. This color has become much less blue over the past 10 billion years, indicating that redder stars are becoming more prevalent. In a contest to better name the color, notable entries included skyvory, univeige, and the winner: cosmic latte.

If you are a digger please respect the submit enough to use a description. There is now no reason not to, you have it already. http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap091101.html