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This image, called the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, offers a core sample of the deep universe with diverse galaxies of various ages, sizes, shapes and colors.
The scale of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field (blue box) versus the field of view of the Nancy Roman ... More Telescope (orange boxes). Each of Roman's 18 independent viewing instruments is more than ...
The Hubble Space Telescope will be able to look deeper if NASA decides to go forward with a final servicing mission to upgrade it. One instrument slated to be installed is the Wide-Field Planetary ...
Called the eXtreme Deep Field, or XDF, the photo was assembled by combining 10 years of NASA Hubble Space Telescope photographs taken of a patch of sky at the center of the original Hubble Ultra ...
The Hubble Ultra Deep Field is one of, if not the most, famous picture the Hubble Space Telescope has taken. Objects in this image are up to 13-bililon light-years from Earth and it reveals a ...
The result was the iconic image dubbed the "Hubble Ultra-Deep Field" (HUDF) which, even in a space that small, revealed in excess of ten thousand galaxies.
The image was taken in the same region as the most amazing photo Hubble Ultra Deep Field, which was taken in 2004 and is the deepest visible-light image of the universe.
The Hubble Ultra-Deep Field was taken from September 24, 2003 to January 16, 2004 ultimately revealing galaxies thought to be formed 13.2 billion years ago, half a billion years after the Big Bang.
In 2004 the Hubble Ultra Deep Field images, pioneering deep-field observations with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, were published.
A newly-released picture taken by the Hubble Telescope is adding more color to the Hubble Ultra Deep Field (HUDF) image by detecting thousands of galaxies in the ultraviolet spectrum. The study ...
This week astronomers with the Hubble Space Telescope project released images looking deeper into the universe than ever before. We'll talk about what might be learned from the Ultra Deep Field ...
The Hubble Ultra Deep Field captured these two galaxies, roughly 5.5 billion light-years from Earth, merging.