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Hst Collection (page 3)

"HST: Revealing the Wonders of the Universe" Step into a world beyond our reach, where mysteries unfold and beauty knows no bounds

Background imageHst Collection: Dwarf galaxy Leo IV, HST image

Dwarf galaxy Leo IV, HST image
Dwarf galaxy Leo IV, Hubble Space Telescope (HST) optical image. This small, dim galaxy in visible light is a sparse scattering of stars that are virtually indistinguishable from the background

Background imageHst Collection: Planetary nebula NGC 5198, HST image

Planetary nebula NGC 5198, HST image
Planetary nebula NGC 5198, Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image. Combined optical and infrared image of the planetary nebula NGC 5198

Background imageHst Collection: Spiral galaxy NGC 1073, HST image

Spiral galaxy NGC 1073, HST image
Spiral galaxy NGC 1073, Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image. Optical image of the barred spiral galaxy NGC 1073. Our own galaxy, the Milky Way, is thought to be a similar barred spiral

Background imageHst Collection: Pre-planetary nebula, HST image C013 / 5017

Pre-planetary nebula, HST image C013 / 5017
Pre-planetary nebula. Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image of the pre-planetary nebula IRAS 23166+1655 (spiral at left). Behind the spiral of gas is thought to be a binary star system

Background imageHst Collection: Giant elliptical galaxy, HST image C013 / 5010

Giant elliptical galaxy, HST image C013 / 5010
Giant elliptical galaxy ESO 306-17, Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image. This is a fossil group galaxy, the result of a cluster of galaxies merging

Background imageHst Collection: Hubble telescope

Hubble telescope
Hubble Space Telescope. Hubble Space Telescope (HST) in the Space Shuttles cargo bay after servicing. The telescopes array of golden solar panels can be clearly seen whilst the thin outline of

Background imageHst Collection: Artists impression of Hubble Telescope in orbit

Artists impression of Hubble Telescope in orbit

Background imageHst Collection: Artwork of Hubble Space Telescope and Eagle Nebula

Artwork of Hubble Space Telescope and Eagle Nebula
Hubble Space Telescope. Artwork of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) in Earth orbit, facing the giant gas and dust pillars of the Eagle Nebula (M16)

Background imageHst Collection: Stars towards the galaxy centre

Stars towards the galaxy centre
Central Milky Way stars. Hubble space telescope (HST) view of old, massive stars lying at the centre of our galaxy, the Milky Way

Background imageHst Collection: HST WFPC2 image of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9

HST WFPC2 image of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9
Comet P/Shoemaker-Levy 9. Visible light image of the multiple cores of Comet P/Shoemaker-Levy 9, made by the Wide Field and Planetary Camera-2 of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) in December 1993

Background imageHst Collection: Neptunes changing seasons

Neptunes changing seasons
Neptunes seasons. Image 3 of 3. Hubble Space Telescope image of cloud bands on Neptune in 2002. Large white and green cloud bands are seen in the south, which could be due to the arrival of spring

Background imageHst Collection: Pluto, Charon and new moons, 2006

Pluto, Charon and new moons, 2006
New moons of Pluto. Hubble Space Telescope (HST) images of Pluto (centre) and its large moon Charon (below and right of Pluto), and two newly discovered moons

Background imageHst Collection: Clouds in atmosphere of Uranus

Clouds in atmosphere of Uranus
Uranus. Coloured Hubble Space Telescope near- infrared image of Uranus, showing clouds in its hydrogen & helium atmosphere

Background imageHst Collection: Aurorae on Jupiter

Aurorae on Jupiter. Coloured ultraviolet Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image of aurorae (light blue) at the north pole of Jupiter

Background imageHst Collection: Planet Neptune, showing weather patterns

Planet Neptune, showing weather patterns
Clouds on Neptune. Planet Neptune, showing weather patterns in its atmosphere. Neptune appears mostly blue because of absorption of red light by methane gas in its atmosphere

Background imageHst Collection: Stars in M4 globular cluster

Stars in M4 globular cluster, optical Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image. Globular star clusters are balls of hundreds of thousands of stars

Background imageHst Collection: Dust disc and jet around young star, HH-30

Dust disc and jet around young star, HH-30
Jet from a young star. Visible light image of the Herbig-Haro object HH-30, a jet of gas about half a light year long, as seen by the Hubble Space Telescope

Background imageHst Collection: Stars in globular cluster NGC 6397

Stars in globular cluster NGC 6397
Stars in globular star cluster NGC 6397, Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image. The stars in globular star clusters are densely packed

Background imageHst Collection: Uranus and Ariel

Uranus and Ariel. Hubble Space Telescope image of the moon Ariel (white dot) orbiting its planet Uranus (blue and green). The shadow of the moon (black dot) is seen to the moons right

Background imageHst Collection: Globular cluster 47 Tucanae

Globular cluster 47 Tucanae
47 Tucanae globular cluster. Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image of the 47 Tucanae globular star cluster (NGC 104), one of the brightest clusters in the sky

Background imageHst Collection: Hubble image of Uranus

Hubble image of Uranus
Uranus. Coloured Hubble space telescope (HST) infrared image of Uranus, showing clouds in its hydrogen and helium atmosphere

Background imageHst Collection: Globular cluster M15

Globular cluster M15. Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image of the globular star cluster M15. This is a ball of hundreds of thousands of stars which lies around 40

Background imageHst Collection: Hubble Space Telescope control room

Hubble Space Telescope control room
Hubble Space Telescope mission control. Overview of the Mission Operations Room (MOR) for the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) at NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center, Maryland

Background imageHst Collection: Hubble Space Telescopes 100, 000th image

Hubble Space Telescopes 100, 000th image. Hubble Space Telescope image showing a quasar, a new galaxy and foreground objects. The quasar is at centre, and is about 9 billion light years from Earth

Background imageHst Collection: Mice colliding galaxies

Mice colliding galaxies
The Mice colliding galaxies, optical image taken by the Hubble Space Telescopes new Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) on April 7th 2002

Background imageHst Collection: Colliding galaxies Arp 148, HST image

Colliding galaxies Arp 148, HST image
Colliding galaxies Arp 148, Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image. Also known as Mayalls Object, this structure is the result of a collision between two galaxies

Background imageHst Collection: Supernova remnant LMC N 49

Supernova remnant LMC N 49, optical Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image. These clouds of glowing gas and dust are where the explosion of a large star, thousands of years ago

Background imageHst Collection: Spiral galaxy NGC 4414

Spiral galaxy NGC 4414, Hubble Space Telescope image. New stars are being formed on the edges of the galaxy. These stars are blue, compared to the older stars in the centre

Background imageHst Collection: Planetary nebula NGC 3132

Planetary nebula NGC 3132. Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image of the planetary nebula NGC 3132, the Eight-burst, or Southern Ring nebula

Background imageHst Collection: Seyfert galaxy

Seyfert galaxy
Active galaxy. Coloured Hubble Space Telescope (HST) spectrograph images of the active (Seyfert) galaxy NGC 4151, thought to contain a black hole

Background imageHst Collection: Dark matter ring in galaxy cluster

Dark matter ring in galaxy cluster
Dark matter ring in the galaxy cluster CI 0024+17, Hubble Space Telescope image. The ring is seen surrounding a central concentration of dark matter (coloured blue here)

Background imageHst Collection: Sirius binary star system

Sirius binary star system, Hubble Space Telescope image. Sirius A (centre, Alpha Canis Majoris), in the constellation Canis Major

Background imageHst Collection: Cats Eye Nebula and the Hubble telescope

Cats Eye Nebula and the Hubble telescope

Background imageHst Collection: Seyferts sextet galaxy cluster

Seyferts sextet galaxy cluster, Hubble Space Telescope image. Despite the name, only four galaxies are members of the group

Background imageHst Collection: Spiral galaxy NGC 4603

Spiral galaxy NGC 4603. Optical image of a type Sc spiral galaxy, which lies 108 million light years away in the constellation of Centaurus

Background imageHst Collection: Hubble image of distant irregular blue galaxies

Hubble image of distant irregular blue galaxies
Faint blue galaxies. True colour Hubble Space Telescope image of irregular faint blue galaxies, the most common class of objects in the early Universe

Background imageHst Collection: Quasar Markarian 205

Quasar Markarian 205. Optical image of the quasar Markarian 205 (upper right) and the spiral galaxy NGC 4319 (centre). These objects lie in the constellation of Draco

Background imageHst Collection: Supernova remnant 1987A

Supernova remnant 1987A. Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image of the glowing ring of gas that is the remains of supernova 1987A. SN1987A is located in the Large Magellanic Cloud galaxy

Background imageHst Collection: Mars close approach 2007, HST image

Mars close approach 2007, HST image
Mars close approach 2007, Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image. Mars is a cold desert world, with an atmosphere of mostly carbon dioxide

Background imageHst Collection: Mars, October 2005, HST image

Mars, October 2005, HST image
Mars, Hubble Space Telescope image. North is at top. A large dust storm is seen at centre (brighter orange area). Mars was 43 million kilometres from Earth during this close approach on 28 October

Background imageHst Collection: Vesta asteroid, artwork

Vesta asteroid, artwork
Vesta asteroid. Computer artwork of the asteroid Vesta (4 Vesta), based on Hubble Space Telescope (HST) images. The asteroids south pole (lower centre) has been flattened

Background imageHst Collection: Star cluster Pismis 24 above NGC 6357

Star cluster Pismis 24 above NGC 6357
Star cluster Pismis 24 (upper centre) above the nebula NGC 6357, Hubble Space Telescope image. The nebula is glowing under the impact of radiation from hot, young stars, such as those in the cluster

Background imageHst Collection: Light echoes around star V838 Monocerotis

Light echoes around star V838 Monocerotis, Hubble Space Telescope image. This star underwent a massive brightening, or nova, in 2002

Background imageHst Collection: Planetary nebula, X-ray composite

Planetary nebula, X-ray composite
Planetary nebula. Combined X-ray and optical image of the planetary nebula BD+30-3639. A planetary nebula is a bubble of hot gas and dust, many times the size of our solar system

Background imageHst Collection: Milky Way galactic centre, composite

Milky Way galactic centre, composite image. This image is around 250 light years across. It shows the centre of the Milky Way galaxy, located 26

Background imageHst Collection: Pluto and its moons, artwork

Pluto and its moons, artwork
Pluto is one of the lonely outriders of our Solar System. It is a dwarf planet, having a mass of about one-quarter of our Moon and a diameter of 2300 km

Background imageHst Collection: VY Canis Majoris

VY Canis Majoris. Combined polarised light Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and Keck Observatory image of gaseous outbursts from the red supergiant star VY Canis Majoris

Background imageHst Collection: Crab nebula

Crab nebula (M1). Composite x-ray, infrared and optical image of the Crab nebula, the remnant of a supernova. In the centre of the nebula is the remains of the stars core



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"HST: Revealing the Wonders of the Universe" Step into a world beyond our reach, where mysteries unfold and beauty knows no bounds. The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) has been our window to the cosmos since its launch in 1990, capturing breathtaking images that leave us in awe. In 2012, the Hubble Ultra Deep Field unveiled a mesmerizing tapestry of galaxies scattered across space. Each speck of light represents an entire galaxy, billions of stars swirling together in harmony. It's a reminder of just how vast and diverse our universe truly is. But it's not just distant galaxies that captivate us; even closer to home, HST reveals stunning celestial phenomena. The "Pillars of Creation" showcase towering columns of gas and dust within the Eagle Nebula, giving birth to new stars amidst their ethereal glow. Nebulas hold countless secrets too - take Sh 2-106 for example. This HST image captures its intricate structure with vibrant colors dancing through space like cosmic brushstrokes on a canvas. The M51 whirlpool galaxy beckons us with its swirling arms locked in an eternal dance with its companion galaxy. Meanwhile, the Crab Nebula (M1) showcases remnants from an ancient supernova explosion - a testament to nature's power and resilience. Witnessing the Cygnus Loop Supernova Blast Wave reminds us that even death can be beautiful as shockwaves ripple through interstellar clouds, creating magnificent patterns against the backdrop of deep space. Giant twisters emerge within the Lagoon Nebula - colossal structures sculpted by stellar winds and radiation pressure. These monstrous formations remind us that chaos can give birth to extraordinary creations. Spiral galaxies also grace HST's portfolio - NGC 2841 displays elegant arms adorned with countless stars while M81 unveils itself as a composite image showcasing different wavelengths merging into one harmonious whole.