With Halloween just around the corner, NASA has released its latest Galaxy of Horrors posters. Presented in the style of vintage horror movie advertisements, the new posters feature a “dead” galaxy, an explosive gamma ray burst caused by colliding stellar corpses, and ever-elusive dark matter; the posters are also available in Spanish.

As fun and creative as all three posters are, they’re based on real phenomena. In a dead galaxy, new star birth has ceased and most remaining stars are the long-lived variety, which are small and red, giving the galaxy a crimson glow. Likewise, when dead stars collide, they sometimes create a gamma ray burst, or the brightest type of explosion in the universe. And while dark matter may sound like it’s right out of a Halloween tale, its gravity keeps stars inside galaxies and hold groups of galaxies together in clusters – yet scientists don’t know what this invisible stuff is made of.

Free to download, the posters were produced by NASA’s Exoplanet Exploration Program Office, located at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, with the input of astrophysicists. The posters are also available in Spanish: Cementerio GalácticoMateria Oscura, and Demonions de Rayos Gamma.

Roasted Planet

As HD 80606 b approaches its star from an extreme, elliptical orbit, it suffers star-grazing torture that causes howling, supersonic winds and shockwave storms across the planet.

Can you hear this exoplanet screaming?
As HD 80606 b approaches its star from an extreme, elliptical orbit, it suffers star-grazing torture that causes howling, supersonic winds and shockwave storms across the planet. Its torturous journey boils its atmosphere to a hellish 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit every 111 days, roasting both its light and dark sides. HD 80606b will never escape this scorching nightmare.

Dark Energy

An unseen power is prowling throughout the cosmos, driving the universe to expand at a quickening rate. This relentless pressure, called dark energy, is nothing like dark matter, that mysterious material only revealed by its gravitational pull.

This bone-chilling force will leave you shivering alone in terror!

An unseen power is prowling throughout the cosmos, driving the universe to expand at a quickening rate. This relentless pressure, called dark energy, is nothing like dark matter, that mysterious material only revealed by its gravitational pull. Dark energy offers a bigger fright: pushing galaxies farther apart over trillions of years, leaving the universe to an inescapable, freezing death in the pitch black expanse of outer space.?

Devoured by Gravity

Lurking in our galaxy, approximately 6,000 light-years from Earth, is a monster black hole named CygnusX-1. Don’t get too close, or you’ll become its next meal!

Cygnus X-1 Presents:
It’s Dinner Time and You’re The Meal!
Lurking in our galaxy, approximately 6,000 light-years from Earth, is a monster named CygnusX-1. This black hole, which has about 14.8 times the mass of our Sun, will stretch and squeeze anything it captures in its immense gravity. Cygnus X-1 is waiting, snacking on its neighboring star. Don’t get too close, or you’ll become its next meal!
Observed by NASA’s NuSTAR and Chandra X-Ray Telescopes

“One of the things I really like about these posters is that if you spend some time studying the art and then maybe go learn a little more about each of these topics, you’ll see there was a lot of thought by the artists about the choices they made to highlight the science,” said Jason Rhodes, an astrophysicist at JPL who consulted on the project.

Take that dark matter poster, which carries the tagline “Something Else Is Out There.” The massive spider seen crawling across the sky on a glowing web is pure fiction, but the concept alludes to something called the cosmic web, which is the large-scale organization of matter and dark matter in the universe: Thin filaments of matter and dark matter connect clusters of galaxies, like roadways between major cities. In fact, scientific visualizations of the cosmic web look similar to the spider web featured in the poster.

Similarly, the two narrow energy beams seen in the gamma ray burst poster reflect how they occur in real life, traveling in opposite directions from the colliding stellar corpses. The bursts are so intense that if such an event occurred “close” to the Earth, causing a beam to fire directly at our planet, the beam of radiation and particles could do harm. But the rarity of these events makes that extremely unlikely, according Judy Racusin, an astrophysicist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center who also consulted on the posters. In fact, astronomers estimate that a gamma ray burst goes off in our galaxy only about once every 10,000 years, but they are only visible to us about every 10,000,000 to 100,000,000 years. Even then, one of these events wouldn’t necessarily pose a threat to our planet.

While gamma ray bursts are real, the space travelers observing the event in the Galaxy of Horrors image are, of course, the product of creative license.

“The poster art is a really fun way to imagine one of these happening,” said Racusin. “But I wouldn’t want to be those space travelers!”

To learn more about these posters and download both the Spanish and English versions for free, visit the Galaxy of Horrors!

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SCIFI Radio Staff

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