20 breathtaking astronomy photos capture the best of space

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Space and photography fans are in for a treat. The Astronomy Photographer of the Year competition has returned, with its sixteenth edition shortlist featuring a stunning array of photographs.

London’s Royal Museums Greenwich received a whopping 3,500 entries from both amateur and professional photographers globally, each of whom captured a breathtaking glimpse of space. The 30 shortlisted entries range from visuals from the Geminid meteor shower to an aurora in the shape of a dragon to ancient supernova remnants. Categories cover everything from stars and nebulae to asteroids to lunar and solar images.

The official winners of the competition will be revealed in September, but for now the shortlist is an incredible first look at the intersection between art and astronomy. Take a look:

This image shows the details of the Sun’s surface.

The Isaac Newton Telescope at the edge of the telescope facility on La Palma.

Mount Aso in Kumamoto Prefecture.

SNR G156.2+5.7 is a beautiful and faint supernova remnant (SNR) in the constellation Auriga.

A view of the Eystrahorn Mountain on the night of a KP7 storm.

An aurora panorama resembling a dragon, pictured in RaufarhΓΆfn, Iceland.

CG4 (Cometary Globule 4) is a complex of nebulosity and dust with a very peculiar shape, located in the southern constellation of Puppis.

A picture of Snettisham Beach.

The Pleiades photographed in Castilla-La Mancha, Spain.

This image shows a close look at IC 5070, the Pelican Nebula.

The Carina arm of the Milky Way with a statue in the front, photographed in Kunene Region, Namibia.

The planet Ceres and the Blowdryer galaxy photographed in Chile.

This image shows the International Space Station (ISS) transiting the 51 per cent-illuminated Moon.

A picture of the solar eclipse from Australia, composed of superimposed images.

M81, also known as Bode’s Galaxy, photographed in Michigan.

This is a still image from a time-lapse sequence of a solar prominence in Portugal.

An image taken from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) missions.

Saturn’s decreasing ring tilt is helping the big orange moon Titan get closer to Saturn from our viewpoint than it has in over a decade.

The aurora in motion when it turned into something resembling a dragon’s head on a clear night.

Want more Astronomy Photographer of the Year wonders? Check out 2023’s list.

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