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Telescope's incredible photo is a gas -- 163,000 light-years away 

An incredible new photo taken by a telescope in the Southern Hemisphere captures an odd couple shimmering beautifully in a star-forming region of a nearby galaxy.

The new photo was taken by the Very Large Telescope in Chile and shows two clouds of gas shining in blue and red in the Large Magellanic Cloud, about 163,000 light-years from the Milky Way. The European Southern Observatory, which oversees the Very Large Telescope, unveiled the image Wednesday along with a video tour of the photo of the dazzling cosmic clouds.

"The strikingly different colors of NGC 2014 and NGC 2020 are the result of both the different chemical makeup of the surrounding gas and the temperatures of the stars that are causing the clouds to glow," officials from ESO wrote in an image description. "The distances between the stars and the respective gas clouds also play a role."

The pink cloud, NGC 2014, is mostly composed of hydrogen gas. A cluster of young, hot stars emits radiation that strips electrons from the atoms in the gas, creating the red glow, ESO officials said. Stellar winds from the new stars cause the gas around them to scatter.

Gas
This wide-field view captures an odd couple in the constellation of Dorado (The Swordfish): NGC 2014 and NGC 2020. These two glowing gas clouds, in the center of the frame, are located in the Large Magellanic Cloud, one of the Milky Way’s satellite galaxies.ESO / Digitized Sky Survey 2. Acknowledgement: Davide De Martin

NGC 2020 is the blue circle of gas around the bright new star shining on the left hand side of the image. The star could be more than 10 times as hot as the surface of Earth's sun, ESO officials wrote.

"The distinctive blueish color of this rather mysterious object is again created by radiation from the hot star — this time by ionizing oxygen instead of hydrogen," ESO officials said of NGC 2020.

The Large Magellanic Cloud and its counterpart, the Small Magellanic Cloud, were named for the explorer Ferdinand Magellan. Although Magellan died in the Philippines before returning to Europe, his crew brought news of the celestial sights to the continent.

The Large Magellanic Cloud is about 14,000 light-years across, while the Milky Way extends about 100,000 light-years, ESO officials said. It is known as an irregular dwarf galaxy and plays host to less than one tenth the mass of the Milky Way. 

The Large Magellanic Cloud can be seen with the naked eye on a clear night. It looks like a "blurry patch" that "appears to be just like a cloud in the Earth's atmosphere," ESO officials wrote.

Follow Miriam Kramer @mirikramerand Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.