Two galaxies in one frame — Bode's Galaxy (M81) and the Cigar Galaxy (M82), captured together through my own telescope from 12 million light-years away. They're a famous pair in Ursa Major, gravitationally locked together and visually stunning side by side.
M81 is the calm one: a textbook spiral, ~90,000 light-years across, arms tracing outward in elegant curves. M82 is its violent neighbor — an edge-on starburst galaxy with intense red jets of gas exploding outward from its core, the result of a near-collision with M81 around 600 million years ago. The pair tells a quiet story about how galaxies meet, deform, and keep going.
Real astrophotography. No AI, no stock. Two galaxies, side by side, on your wall.
Two galaxies in one frame — Bode's Galaxy (M81) and the Cigar Galaxy (M82), captured together through my own telescope from 12 million light-years away. They're a famous pair in Ursa Major, gravitationally locked together and visually stunning side by side.
M81 is the calm one: a textbook spiral, ~90,000 light-years across, arms tracing outward in elegant curves. M82 is its violent neighbor — an edge-on starburst galaxy with intense red jets of gas exploding outward from its core, the result of a near-collision with M81 around 600 million years ago. The pair tells a quiet story about how galaxies meet, deform, and keep going.
Real astrophotography. No AI, no stock. Two galaxies, side by side, on your wall.