It really is the summer of cosmic anniversaries. 

Following the anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing and the anniversary of Space.com opening its doors to the internet, NASA‘s Chandra X-ray Observatory, the world’s most powerful X-ray telescope, turns 25 today — and to celebrate the observatory’s legacy, NASA has released 25 exquisite, never-before-seen pictures of iconic astronomical objects like the Crab Nebula, Pillars of Creation and Cassiopeia A that take us on a breathtaking journey through the universe through Chandra’s eyes.

Chandra launched in 1999 — the same year Space.com started — aboard Space Shuttle Columbia. From its egg-shaped orbit high above Earth’s atmosphere that takes it over one-third of the way to the moon, the observatory has led to many discoveries by recording x-ray emissions beamed from long-dead stars, supermassive black holes and clusters of galaxies.

The 25 new Chandra images. (Image credit: NASA/CXC/SAO)

“For a quarter century, Chandra has made discovery after amazing discovery,” Pat Slane, the director of the Chandra X-ray Center located at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Massachusetts, said in a statement. “Astronomers have used Chandra to investigate mysteries that we didn’t even know about when we were building the telescope — including exoplanets and dark energy.”