Hubble Spies a Zoo of Galaxies
Gazing deep into the universe, NASA’s Hubble
Space Telescope has spied a menagerie of galaxies.
Located within the same tiny region of space, these
numerous galaxies display an assortment of unique
characteristics. Some are big; some are small. A
few are relatively nearby, but most are far away.
Hundreds of these faint galaxies have never been
seen before until their light was captured by Hubble.
This image represents a typical view of our distant
universe. In taking this picture, Hubble is looking
down a long corridor of galaxies stretching billions
of light-years distant in space corresponding to
looking billions of years back in time. The field
shown in this picture covers a relatively small
patch of sky, a fraction the area of the full moon,
yet it is richly populated with a variety of galaxy
types.
A handful of large fully formed galaxies are scattered
throughout the image. These galaxies are easy to
see because they are relatively close to us. Several
of the galaxies are spirals with flat disks that
are oriented edge-on or face-on to our line of sight,
or somewhere in between. Elliptical galaxies and
more exotic galaxies with bars or tidal tails are
also visible.
Many galaxies that appear small in this image are
simply farther away. These visibly smaller galaxies
are so distant that their light has taken billions
of years to reach us. We are seeing these galaxies,
therefore, when they were much younger than the
larger, nearby galaxies in the image. One red galaxy
to the lower left of the bright central star is
acting as a lens to a large galaxy directly behind
it. Light from the farther galaxy is bent around
the nearby galaxy’s nucleus to form a distorted
arc.
Sprinkled among the thousands of galaxies in this
image are at least a dozen foreground stars that
reside in our Milky Way Galaxy. The brightest of
these foreground stars is the red object in the
center of the image. The stars are easily discernable
from galaxies because of their diffraction spikes,
long cross-hair-like features that look like they
are emanating from the centers of the stars. Diffraction
spikes are an image artifact caused by bright starlight
traveling through the telescope’s optical
system.
This image is a composite of multiple exposures
of a single field taken by the Advanced Camera for
Surveys. The image, taken in September 2003, was
a bonus picture, taken when one of the other Hubble
cameras was snapping photos for a science program.
This image took nearly 40 hours to complete and
is one of the longest exposures ever taken by Hubble.
Image Credit: NASA, ESA, and The Hubble Heritage
Team (STScI/AURA)
Acknowledgment: J. Blakeslee (JHU) and R. Thompson
(University of Arizona)
|