—Sophie M., Washington, D.C. Not at all. The telescope operates in infrared wavelengths, which human eyes cannot see. So the images were painstakingly colorized with a palette and style designed to represent the various frequencies that were captured at that moment in time. (You can do the same with radio waves, but the result won’t be as engaging.) This kind of art is intended to both inspire the public imagination and justify the continuation of expensive space programs. It has succeeded on both fronts.