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Hubble
Highlights
|
Greatest
Hits From The Last Eight Years
The
Hubble Space Telescope has established itself as a premier
astronomical observatory that continues to make dramatic observations
and discoveries at the forefront of astronomy.
Following
the successful First and Second Servicing Missions, the Telescope
has achieved all of its original objectives. Among a long
list of achievements, Hubble has:
- Improved
our knowledge of the size and age of the universe
- Provided
decisive evidence of the existence of supermassive black
holes at the centers of galaxies
- Clearly
revealed the galactic environments in which quasars reside
- Detected
objects with coherent structure (protogalaxies) close to
the time of the origin of the universe
- Provided
unprecedentedly clear images and spectra of the collision
of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 with Jupiter
- Detected
a large number of protoplanetary disks around stars
- Elucidated
the various processes by which stars form
- Provided
the first map of the surface of Pluto
- Routinely
monitored the meteorology of planets beyond the orbit of
Earth
- Made
the first detection of an ultraviolet high-energy laser
in Eta Carinae. After the Servicing Missions 3A and 3B,
the Hubble Space Telescope will view the universe anew with
significantly expanded scientific and technological capabilities.
A
STAR IS BORN

|
FUNNEL
CLOUDS IN SPACE
|
DYING
IN COLOR

|
| Towers
of sculpted gas in the Eagle nebula (M16) are actually
cocoons for embryonic stars. |
Giant
funnel-shaped clouds of gas (upper left) were captured
in another stellar "maternity ward," the Lagoon nebula
(M8). |
Rings
of gas surround the dying star NGC 6543, nicknamed the
Cat's Eye. |
STELLAR
EXHAUST

|
A
"ZOOM LENS" IN SPACE
|
COSMIC
COLLISION CREATES STARS

|
| The
dying star M2-9 is nicknamed the Twin Jet nebula because
the two tubes of gas streaming from it behave like exhaust
from a jet engine. |
The
arc-like pattern spread across the picture like a spider
web is an illusion caused by the gravitational field of
a cluster of galaxies called Abell 2218. This process,
called gravitational lensing, magnifies, brightens, and
distorts images of objects that lie far beyond the cluster,
providing a powerful "zoom lens" for viewing galaxies
that are so far away they could not normally be observed
with the largest available telescopes. |
A
collision between two spiral galaxies has spawned brilliant
bursts of star birth. |
BALLOONS
OF GAS
|
GASEOUS
"HULA-HOOPS"
|
GALLERY
OF GALAXIES
|
| A
pair of billowing dust and gas clouds have been cast off
by the massive dying star Eta Carinae. |
A
large pair of gaseous rings frame a glowing halo of gas
surrounding the massive dying star Supernova 1987A. |
Hubble
peers back more than 10 billion years to reveal at least
1,500 galaxies at various stages of development. |
SATURN'S
LIGHT SHOW
|
HOW'S
THE WEATHER?
|
FOOD
FOR A BLACK HOLE
|
| Saturn's
north and south poles display spectacular oval-shaped
curtains of light, called auroras, which were captured
in ultraviolet light by Hubble's Space Telescope Imaging
Spectrograph (STIS). |
Hubble
has been used to monitor weather conditions on Mars. |
A
spiral-shaped disk of dust is feeding a massive black
hole in the galaxy, NGC 4261. |
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|