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Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar 2008 (25 Pix) - Section 3

Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar 2008 (25 Pix) 

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  #21  
04-04-2010, 01:03 AM
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Re: Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar 2008 (25 Pix)

Looking across 26,000 light-years of space toward the center of our Galaxy, Hubble captured this dense view of over 150,000 stars in February of 2004 while monitoring for any dips in brightness, or transits of orbiting planets. 16 candidate stars were found for closer scrutiny.
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  #22  
04-04-2010, 01:04 AM
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Re: Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar 2008 (25 Pix)

Seen here is a very thin section of a supernova remnant caused by a stellar explosion that occurred more than 1,000 years ago. On or around May 1, 1006 A.D., observers around the world witnessed and recorded the arrival of light from what is now called SN 1006, a tremendous supernova explosion caused by the final death throes of a white dwarf star nearly 7,000 light-years away. The supernova was probably the brightest star ever seen by humans, and surpassed Venus as the brightest object in the night time sky, only to be surpassed by the moon. It was visible even during the day for weeks, and remained visible to the naked eye for at least two and a half years before fading away. Today we know that the shockwave of SN 1006 has a diameter of nearly 60 light-years, and it is still expanding at roughly 6 million miles per hour.
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  #23  
04-04-2010, 01:04 AM
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Re: Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar 2008 (25 Pix)

The Cat's Eye Nebula (NGC 6543), about 3,300 light-years distant, shows a bull's eye pattern of eleven or even more concentric rings, or shells, around the its center. Each "ring" is actually the edge of a spherical bubble seen projected onto the sky - that's why it appears bright along its outer edge. Observations suggest the star ejected its mass in a series of pulses at 1,500-year intervals. These convulsions created dust shells, each of which contain as much mass as all of the planets in our solar system combined (still only one percent of the Sun's mass). The view from Hubble is like seeing an onion cut in half, where each skin layer is discernible.
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04-04-2010, 01:05 AM
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Re: Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar 2008 (25 Pix)

ESO 593-8 is an impressive pair of interacting galaxies with a feather-like galaxy crossing a companion galaxy. The two components will probably merge to form a single galaxy in the future. The pair is adorned with a number of bright blue star clusters. ESO 593-8 is located in the constellation of Sagittarius, the Archer, some 650 million light-years away from Earth.
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  #25  
04-04-2010, 01:05 AM
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Re: Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar 2008 (25 Pix)

This image is called the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, and it is by far my favorite Hubble image. Starting in late 2003, astronomers pointed Hubble at a tiny, relatively empty part of our sky (only a few stars from the Milky Way visible), and created an exposure nearly 12 days long over a four-month period. The result is this amazing image, looking back through time at thousands of galaxies that range from 1 to 13 billion light-years away from Earth. Some 10,000 galaxies were observed in this tiny patch of sky (a tenth the size of the full moon) - each galaxy a home to billions of stars. Go outside tonight, take a ball-point pen with you, and hold it up in front of the night sky at arm's length. The tip of your pen is about 1 millimeter wide, and at arm's length, it would cover the 10,000 galaxies seen in the Ultra Deep Field image. That's how unbelievably massive the visible universe is. By way of comparison, to really put us Earthlings in our place in the Grand Scheme, please have a look at another famous image, the Pale Blue Dot - a photograph taken of the Earth (the tiny pale speck, top center) by Voyager 1 in 1990 from 4 billion miles away (about 6 light-hours). I will finish with the words of astronomer Carl Sagan about this Pale Blue Dot: "That's here. That's home. That's us. On it everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, lived out their lives. The aggregate of our joy and suffering, thousands of confident religions, ideologies, and economic doctrines, every hunter and forager, every hero and coward, every creator and destroyer of civilization, every king and peasant, every young couple in love, every mother and father, hopeful child, inventor and explorer, every teacher of morals, every corrupt politician, every "superstar", every "supreme leader", every saint and sinner in the history of our species lived there - on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam."
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  #26  
04-04-2010, 01:12 AM
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Re: Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar 2008 (25 Pix)

some amazing sights out there.
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  #27  
04-04-2010, 01:14 AM
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Re: Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar 2008 (25 Pix)

Guttsfukk this is by far my favorite post by you.

Every single one of these pictures seemed better than the last. I found myself stopping and just staring at some, snapping out of it and doing the same at the next one.

I can't even choose any favorites. I want to name them all, although the photo of 150,000 stars almost gave me a seizure.
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  #28  
04-04-2010, 01:17 AM
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Re: Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar 2008 (25 Pix)

yeah i'd struggle to even narrow it down to 5 favourites
  #29  
04-04-2010, 01:22 AM
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Re: Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar 2008 (25 Pix)

I don't even know how I could rate them. They're so different. I feel completely lost looking at them. The Pillars of Creation, and the Cat's Eye Nebula just rip my mind out and swing it around.

Like, that is beauty on a mammoth scale.

Makes me think of the speech Rutger Hauer's character Roy Batty says in Blade Runner for some reason.
  #30  
04-04-2010, 01:27 AM
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Re: Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar 2008 (25 Pix)

makes you want to build a big telescope in the garden to go look through and get stoned under
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