A Life Aloft
Well-Known Member
In 2020, the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) will have been photographing the cosmos for 30 years. It has had a long and illustrious career, capturing some of the most breathtaking, beautiful images in the entire universe.
With abilities far, far beyond those of the human eye, the HST captures near-ultraviolet, visible, and near infrared light while sitting outside the blurring effect of the Earth's atmosphere. This unique combination of abilities lets the HST, whose principal mirror is larger than a human being at eight feet, peer into the past and examine stars as they live, breath, and die in fiery explosions.
Humanity's knowledge of the universe would be far less expansive compared to what it is now if not for the HST. For example, astrophysicists even used the HST to determine the exact rate of the universe's expansion.
The HST will eventually fall back down to Earth, however, sometime between 2030 to 2040. Its successor, the James Webb Space Telescope both spiritually and scientifically, is set to launch into space in 2021.
James Webb telescope
Cosmic clouds and stellar winds features LL Orionis interacting with the Orion Nebula flow
The Eagle Nebula
Huge waves are sculpted in this two-lobed nebula some 3,000 light-years away in the constellation of Sagittarius
The Orion Nebula, this particular nebula is among the brightest in our night sky
The Calabash Nebula, pictured here is a spectacular example of the death of a low-mass star like the Sun
Monkey Head Nebula
The Lagoon Nebula, an object with a deceptively tranquil name. The region is filled with intense winds from hot stars, churning funnels of gas, and energetic star formation, all embedded within an intricate haze of gas and pitch-dark dust
Greatest achievements
Westerlund
With abilities far, far beyond those of the human eye, the HST captures near-ultraviolet, visible, and near infrared light while sitting outside the blurring effect of the Earth's atmosphere. This unique combination of abilities lets the HST, whose principal mirror is larger than a human being at eight feet, peer into the past and examine stars as they live, breath, and die in fiery explosions.
Humanity's knowledge of the universe would be far less expansive compared to what it is now if not for the HST. For example, astrophysicists even used the HST to determine the exact rate of the universe's expansion.
The HST will eventually fall back down to Earth, however, sometime between 2030 to 2040. Its successor, the James Webb Space Telescope both spiritually and scientifically, is set to launch into space in 2021.
James Webb telescope
Cosmic clouds and stellar winds features LL Orionis interacting with the Orion Nebula flow
The Eagle Nebula
Huge waves are sculpted in this two-lobed nebula some 3,000 light-years away in the constellation of Sagittarius
The Orion Nebula, this particular nebula is among the brightest in our night sky
The Calabash Nebula, pictured here is a spectacular example of the death of a low-mass star like the Sun
Monkey Head Nebula
The Lagoon Nebula, an object with a deceptively tranquil name. The region is filled with intense winds from hot stars, churning funnels of gas, and energetic star formation, all embedded within an intricate haze of gas and pitch-dark dust
Greatest achievements
Westerlund
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