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Monday, February 9, 2015

Monogram Music Tutor, Celestial Bauble outer space Business Card Templates

Everything to do with space is becoming the new trending theme, so here's an amazing outer space image, made vibrant by HightonRidley. Click to see, personalize and buy this and others like it.


tagged with: monogram initials, genbct1a, musical notes, piano teacher, peronal tuition, music tutor, music lessons, teaching music, star galaxies, sxp1062, one-to-one, keyboards, wind instrument, outer space picture, supernova remnant, star factory, small magellanic cloud, smc, sculptured gas clouds, hot young stars

Galaxies, Stars and Nebulae series A great business card template for a Music Tutor using an outer space image as a background. It has a Monogram, which you change to your initials. Just upload your photo or use the logo provided of musical notes. Then customise with the rest of your details and give a strap line, quote or personal message for that professional feel.
In this composite image, X-rays from Chandra and XMM-Newton have been colored blue and optical data from the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile are colored red and green. The flowering shape on the left is a star factory and on the right is the pulsar. Known as SXP 1062, it's the bright white source located on the right-hand side of the image in the middle of the diffuse blue emission inside a red shell. The diffuse X-rays and optical shell are both evidence for a supernova remnant surrounding the pulsar. The optical data also displays spectacular formations of gas and dust in a star-forming region on the left side of the image. A comparison of the Chandra image with optical images shows that the pulsar has a hot, massive companion.
Astronomers are interested in SXP 1062 because the Chandra and XMM-Newton data show that it is rotating unusually slowly - about once every 18 minutes. (In contrast, some pulsars are found to revolve multiple times per second, including most newly born pulsars.) This relatively leisurely pace of SXP 1062 makes it one of the slowest rotating X-ray pulsars in the SMC.
Two different teams of scientists have estimated that the supernova remnant around SXP 1062 is between 10,000 and 40,000 years old, as it appears in the image. This means that the pulsar is very young, from an astronomical perspective, since it was presumably formed in the same explosion that produced the supernova remnant.
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image code: sxp1062

Image credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/Univ.Potsdam/L.Oskinova et al & ESA/XMM-Newton; Optical: AURA/NOAO/CTIO/Univ.Potsdam/L.Oskinova et al

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