The unprecedented deep
image of the galaxy reveals evidence of a hidden minor merger billions of years ago.
Not exact matches
A newly released
image from NASA Hubble telescope
reveals that a huge cluster
of galaxies called Abell 370, has an array
of galaxies guarding it and is useful in studying far - flung
galaxies by its gravitational lensing property.
As well as the SMC itself this very wide - field
image reveals many background
galaxies and several star clusters, including the very bright 47 Tucanae globular cluster at the right
of the picture.
When combined, the
images revealed never - before - seen stars and
galaxies — some
of them thirtieth magnitude.
As they could
reveal themselves in
images of distant
galaxies, the search is on.
A probe
of the
galaxy with Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3 on June 13, 2013,
revealed a glow in near - infrared light at the source
of the gamma - ray burst, shown in the
image at top, right.
This visible - light
image taken by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope
reveals a pancake - shaped disk
of gas around an extremely bright star in our Milky Way
galaxy.
Hubble's WFC3 camera snapped
images in the near - infrared,
revealing the spatial distribution
of older stars within the actively star - forming
galaxies.
A new vla
image reveals twin jets
of gas shooting from that
galaxy's center, inflating a placenta
of energized gas 200,000 light - years wide.
«First look at birthplaces
of most current stars: Highly sensitive
images reveal details
of distant
galaxies.»
Using the combined power
of nine radio telescopes arrayed across the Southern Hemisphere, the
images reveal features just 15 light - days across in the heart
of the nearby
galaxy Centaurus A, 12 million light - years away.
1990: Supermassive Black Holes Hubble
images revealed that most
galaxies contain supermassive black holes millions
of times heavier than the sun.
The
image, which took 50 hours
of exposure time to create,
reveals the curved, warped
images of thousands
of galaxies, some
of which are further than 12 billion light - years away.
You remember, you know, decades ago they took the first deep field
image, where Hubble focuses its camera on a blank piece
of sky for many, many hours and then
reveals all
of these hidden
galaxies that are farther away than almost anything we've ever seen before.
The journey ends with the Hubble Deep Field North, an
image revealing thousands
of galaxies billions
of light - years away.
Observations
of the ultra-faint
galaxy Segue 2 (zoomed
image) have
revealed that it must reside within such a tiny dark matter halo, providing possibly the first observational evidence that dark matter is as clumpy as long predicted.
«The NIRC2 / LGSAO
image has
revealed the existing stellar population
of this pair
of galaxies,» Fu said.
The
images, captured over a period
of 45 nights using the 6.5 meter Baade Telescope at the Las Campanas Observatory in Chile,
reveal galaxies that existed when the universe was just 1.3 billion years old.
Another tantalizing possibility is that the low - frequency
images may
reveal «halos» and «relics» produced by collisions
of galaxies in clusters.
The Chandra X-ray
image reveals huge bubbles
of hot gas above and below the plane
of the
galaxy.
The small area
of sky
imaged, seemingly devoid
of light, provides a «keyhole» view
of the universe's past; reaching across space and time to
reveal infant
galaxies.
The Keck Observatory and Hubble
images revealed a detailed gravitationally - induced ring
of light around the foreground
galaxy.
This
image made from data obtained with the NASA / ESA Hubble Space Telescope
reveals the dust lanes and star clusters
of this giant
galaxy that give evidence that it was formed from a past merger
of two gas - rich
galaxies (Credit: NASA, ESA, and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI / AURA)-RRB-
«This shows how well such radio
images of the gas distribution in
galaxies can
reveal evidence
of galactic interactions,» Lim said.
his NASA / ESA Hubble Space Telescope
image reveals the iridescent interior
of one
of the most active
galaxies in our local neighbourhood — NGC 1569, a small
galaxy located about eleven million light - years away in the constellation
of Camelopardalis (The Giraffe)(Credit: ESA / Hubble & NASA, Aloisi, Ford)
This NASA / ESA Hubble Space Telescope
image of the core
of the nearest starburst spiral
galaxy, NGC 253,
reveals violent star formation within a region 1, 000 light - years across.
The ultra-deep
images of galaxy clusters are
revealing the faintest
galaxies ever studied, magnified by gravitational lensing.
The
images of the Cartwheel
Galaxies reveal many faint, more distant galaxies, which form a large superstructure and lie near the Sculptor Wall, an enormous structure of galaxy clusters that extends outwards for more than a billion of ligh
Galaxies reveal many faint, more distant
galaxies, which form a large superstructure and lie near the Sculptor Wall, an enormous structure of galaxy clusters that extends outwards for more than a billion of ligh
galaxies, which form a large superstructure and lie near the Sculptor Wall, an enormous structure
of galaxy clusters that extends outwards for more than a billion
of light years.
The NICMOS
images revealed that the
galaxy's core was unusually faint, indicating a lack
of stars close to the galactic center.