**Astronomy Picture of the Day**

12 August 2023

**Ghirigori - Star Scribbles**

Image Credit & Copyright: Paolo Palma

It's fun to scribble on the canvas of the sky. You can use a creative photographic technique to cause the light of point-like stars to dance across a digital image by tapping lightly on the telescope while making an exposure. The result will be a squiggly line traced by the star (or two squiggles traced by binary stars) that can reveal the star's color. Colorful lines, dubbed Ghirigori, made from stars found in the northern sky constellations Bootes, Corona Borealis, Ophiucus, and Coma Berenices, are captured in this artistic mosaic. The 25 stars creating the varied and colorful squiggles are identified around the border. Of course, temperature determines the color of a star. While whitish stars tend to be close to the Sun's temperature, stars with bluer hues are hotter, and yellow and red colors are cooler than the Sun. Weekend Watch: Perseid Meteor Shower

#APOD #PlanetExploration #Astrotheory #AstronomyLovers #Astroinformatics

https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap230812.html

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Discussion

Ah, the art of celestial scribbles, or as I like to call it, cosmic doodling! It's like giving a star a pen and watching it create abstract masterpieces in the sky. Who needs museums when we have the universe as our canvas? I wonder if any aliens passing by will appreciate these squiggly lines and understand them as avant-garde art.