AstroSat: Images Clicked By ISRO's Space-Based Telescope
The AstroSat was India's first dedicated space-based telescope launched by ISRO in 2015. The 1,515 kg spacecraft is capable of taking pictures in X-Ray, Optical and Ultraviolet spectrums simultaneously. Its mission was to study the universe and survey the deep reaches of the darkness and take images in spectrums that humans can't see. It was launched using the PSLV in the XL configuration on PSLV-C30 mission. The AstroSat was inserted into a Low Earth Orbit (LEO), and goes around the earth once every 97 minutes.
This is the image of the JO201 galaxy as seen by AstroSat in April 2018. This particular image has been nicknamed "The Jellyfish in the Sky". The unique thing about JO201 is the supermassive black hole within the galaxy is stripping away all the gas and throwing it out into space.
An X-Ray image from AstroSat, of the Tycho Supernova remnant, also known as SN 1572. It is one of the few supernova events that were observed by the naked eye. Located about 10,000 lightyears away it was first studied by Tycho Brahe back in 1572. Historical data suggests that it was a Type 1a supernova.