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Hubble space telescope: outdoor eye of earth

   Hubble space telescope, the telescope that changed our fundamental understanding of the universe.

The great points of Hubble space telescope


1922 

Edwin Hubble’s Discoveries

With the 2.5-meter (100-inch) Hooker Telescope at Mt. Wilson Observatory in Pasadena, CA, astronomer Edwin Hubble measures the distances and velocities of galaxies—work that led to his discovery of the expanding Universe.

1979

Work Begins on the 2.4 Meter (7.9 ft) Mirror

The optics company PerkinElmer is commissioned to build the Optical Telescope Assembly (OTA) and Fine Guidance Sensors (FGS). The mirror polishing was completed in May 1981.

1983

Dedicating the Hubble Space Telescope

NASA honors the late astronomer, Edwin P. Hubble, for his groundbreaking studies by naming the space-based telescope after him.

1990
FEBRUARY 14, 1990

Voyager 1's Pale Blue Dot

The "Pale Blue Dot" is a part of the first-ever "portrait" of the solar system taken by the Voyager 1 space probe from more than 4 billion miles from Earth. From Voyager's great distance, Earth is a mere point of light in the center of one of the bands of light on the right.

APRIL 24-25, 1990

Hubble Space Telescope Is Launched and Deployed

A new age of astronomy and astrophysics dawns as the Hubble Space Telescope is launched aboard the space shuttle Discovery.

MAY 20, 1990

Hubble Sees First Light

The first image from the Hubble Space Telescope highlights the advantage of photographing stars from above Earth's atmosphere.

JUNE 1990

Flaw in Hubble’s Primary Mirror

Hubble’s first images reveal a flaw in the telescope’s primary mirror, preventing it from focusing.
AUGUST 29, 1990

Supernova 1987A Ring Resolved

Hubble resolves, to an unprecedented detail of 0.1 arcsecond, a mysterious elliptical ring of material around the remnants of Supernova 1987A.

1991

First Science Paper Based on Hubble Data Is Published

An article in the Astrophysical Journal presented findings from galaxy NGC 7457.

APRIL 5, 1991

NASA’s Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory Launches

One of NASA’s Great Observatories determines the locations of gamma rays and sends alerts to support other telescopes.
MAY 17, 1991

Hubble's First Images of Jupiter

This black and white picture of Jupiter is the first of many Hubble observations recording the detailed evolution of Jovian weather.

1992


January 13, 1992 – Chemistry of early universe probed

Astronomers announced that they had detected the rare element boron in an ancient star. This was the first time that astronomers using Hubble had detected elements from the early universe, and this discovery suggested that the element might have been evidence of energetic events that occurred with the birth of our Milky Way galaxy.

November 19, 1992 – Material fueling black hole discovered

Hubble observations were released showing a disk of material being pulled into a suspected black hole at the core of NGC 4261, a giant elliptical galaxy located 45 million light-years away.
At the time, black holes were merely theoretical objects with gravitational pulls so strong that not even light could escape it. This theory has since been proven by astronomers.

1993


June 9, 1993 – Hubble takes major step in determining universe’s age

Astronomers using Hubble announced that they had determined a much more precise distance to galaxy M81, finding it to be 11 million light-years away. (Previous estimates had ranged from 4.5 million to 18 million light-years away.) Only with precise distance measurements to galaxies can astronomers refine the universe’s expansion rate and, in turn, its age. At the time, the age of the universe was estimated to be between 10 billion and 20 billion years old. (Today its age is estimated to be 13.8 billion years.)

December 2–13, 1993 – First servicing mission conducted

Hubble’s first servicing mission, designated STS-61, occurred on December 2 to 13, 1993, aboard space shuttle Endeavor with seven astronauts on board. The primary mission of Servicing Mission 1 (SM1) was to install two new instruments on Hubble. The first was the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2, a new camera that provided internal corrections for the spherical aberration in Hubble’s primary mirror. The second instrument was the Corrective Optics Space Telescope Axial Replacement (COSTAR), which corrected the spherical aberration for the other existing instruments. Following the success of SM1, observations from the Hubble Space Telescope were no longer “blurry.”

1994


January 13, 1994 – Spherical aberration fixed

NASA announced that the new optics installed on Hubble during its first servicing mission successfully corrected the primary mirror’s spherical aberration problem, making Hubble’s observations crisp and clear.

January 14, 1994 – Observations released of massive, unstable star

Hubble observed the star Eta Carinae with the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2, and its observations were released on January 14, 1994. Eta Carinae is a highly unstable star prone to violent outburst that is 4 million times brighter and 150 times more massive than our Sun. It resides over 10,000 light-years away.


May 25, 1994 – Existence of supermassive black holes confirmed

Astronomers reported that Hubble observations confirmed the existence of supermassive black holes at the centers of galaxies. Astronomers had looked at the giant elliptical galaxy M87, located 50 million light-years away from Earth, and found evidence that supported the existence of a gravitationally collapsed object with rapid rotation at its core.


July 16–23, 1994 – Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 struck Jupiter

On July 16, 1994, fragments of the comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 began to impact Jupiter. For the next several days, Hubble observed the remaining fragments from the comet crashing into Jupiter’s atmosphere and leaving visible, bruise-like marks in the planet’s atmosphere. This was the first time astronomers had witnessed the collision of two astronomical objects.

November 8, 1994 – Surface features of Titan resolved

Scientists using Hubble announced that they had produced the first-ever images of surface features on Saturn’s moon Titan. Larger than Mercury but smaller than Mars, Titan has an atmosphere about four times as dense as Earth’s atmosphere, with nitrogen being its primary component.

1995


February 23, 1995 – Oxygen found on Europa

Astronomers announced that they had used Hubble to identify the presence of oxygen in the atmosphere of Jupiter’s moon Europa. This was the first time astronomers identified oxygen in the atmosphere of a satellite and only the third object beyond Earth to possess the gaseous element.

November 2, 1995 – Star birth seen in the Eagle Nebula

Hubble’s iconic image of towering columns of gas and dust in the Eagle Nebula (M16) was released to the world. The image, nicknamed the Pillars of Creation, shows newborn stars emerging from dense pockets of interstellar gas.


1996


January 15, 1996 – Hubble Deep Field image released

Astronomers released the Hubble Deep Field image, the deepest and most detailed view of the universe at the time. Consisting of 342 separate exposures taken with the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 over ten consecutive days in December 1995, the image contains at least 1,500 galaxies at various stages of development. The image represented a small portion of the sky, roughly the size of a dime seen from 75 feet away.

January 17, 1996 – Evidence presented of a planet orbiting star Beta Pictoris

Hubble observations were presented providing strong evidence that a large planet orbits the star Beta Pictoris. Hubble showed that the inner region of dust around the star is unexpectedly warped, which astronomers deduced was caused by the gravitational pull of an unseen planet.

March 7, 1996 – Pluto’s surface revealed

Astronomers published Hubble images of Pluto, which revealed details on the dwarf planet’s surface for the first time. Hubble’s observations showed brightness variations on the surface that could be topographic features such as basins or impact craters.

July 18, 1996 – Hubble’s 100,000th exposure taken

Hubble captured its 100,000th exposure. An exposure is taken when light enters a science instrument and is recorded by detectors. Hubble reached this milestone several years before scientists predicted it would. This exposure was a picture of a quasar that resides 9 billion light-years from Earth.


1997


February 11–21, 1997 – Second servicing mission conducted

A seven-member astronaut crew aboard space shuttle Discovery (on flight STS-82) performed the second servicing mission for Hubble. The goals of Servicing Mission 2 (SM2) included the installation of the Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS) and the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS).

May 12, 1997 – First images released after Servicing Mission 2

The first observations made following Hubble’s successful second servicing mission were released. The observations included images of the Egg Nebula and the heart of the Orion Nebula, as well as spectrographic images of a ring around Supernova 1987A and a supermassive black hole.

May 12, 1997 – Black hole signature recorded

Hubble astronomers announced the discovery of a supermassive black hole in the center of galaxy M84. A spectrographic signature of the black hole was recorded using Hubble’s newly installed Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS), which mapped the motions of gas caught in the black hole’s gravitational pull.

June 19, 1997 – Plume from Io imaged

Astronomers announced that Hubble had observed a 250-mile-high plume of gas and dust from a volcanic eruption on Jupiter’s innermost moon, Io. Scientists estimated that the material must have been ejected from the volcano at more than 2,000 miles per hour. At the time, it was the largest plume yet seen on Io.


1998


September 1998 – Preliminary evidence for an accelerating universe obtained

Astronomers using Hubble published the first evidence that the expansion of the universe is not slowing down, as expected, but accelerating. The results were based on distance measurements to supernovae located so far away that they allowed astronomers to determine the expansion rate of the universe.

October 29 – November 7, 1998 – HOST mission conducted

Space shuttle Discovery carried into orbit a seven-member crew, which included space pioneer John Glenn, as well as the Hubble Space Telescope Orbiting System Test (HOST) on STS-95. The purpose of HOST was to validate equipment planned for installation on Hubble during the next servicing mission to ensure that new technologies would function properly in the environment of space.

1999


January 6, 1999 – Sharpest view of Ring Nebula released

Hubble released this image of the Ring Nebula, which was discovered by French astronomer Charles Messier over 200 years ago and cataloged as Messier 57 (M57). This planetary nebula (so named because of its resemblance to a round planet in small telescopes) is a cylinder of gas seen almost end-on, produced by a dying star shedding its outer layers.

November 13, 1999 – Hubble entered safe mode following gyroscope failures

Hubble was put into “safe mode” after the failure of a fourth gyroscope. Hubble had six gyroscopes on board but needed a minimum of three to accurately point and take observations. In safe mode, the spacecraft maintains its health and safety by pointing its solar panels toward the Sun and turning its antennas to allow for communications, but it does not make any new science observations.

December 19–27, 1999 – Third servicing mission conducted

Hubble’s third servicing mission was split into two following the spacecraft’s gyroscope failures and its immediate need for servicing. Servicing Mission 3A, aboard space shuttle Discovery and designated STS-103, became a rescue mission for the space telescope after it entered “safe mode” in November 1999. The primary goals of space shuttle Discovery’s seven astronauts was to restore Hubble to working order and upgrade its systems. Astronauts installed a new computer as well as all new gyroscopes. After STS-103, Hubble successfully began operations and observations once again.

2000


May 3, 2000 – Universe’s missing hydrogen found

Astronomers announced that they had used Hubble to discover “missing” hydrogen that was created during the big bang but seemed to have disappeared afterward. By studying the light of quasars passing through intervening clouds of gas on its way to Earth, they found that invisible filaments of hydrogen weave their way between galaxies throughout the universe.

2001


April 26, 2001 – First direct visual evidence of planet growth released

Astronomers released pictures from Hubble that provided the first direct visual evidence of planetary “building blocks” within dusty disks around young stars. The “protoplanetary disks” are located in the Orion Nebula approximately 1,500 light-years from Earth.


 

 

November 27, 2001 – First exoplanet atmosphere directly detected

Astronomers announced that Hubble had made the first direct measurement of an exoplanet’s atmosphere. Hubble detected sodium in the atmosphere of a planet orbiting a Sun-like star 150 light-years away called HD 209458.


 

2002


March 1–12, 2002 – Fourth servicing mission conducted

Aboard space shuttle Columbia, seven astronauts embarked on Hubble’s fourth servicing mission, Servicing Mission 3B, on STS-109. Servicing Mission 3A previously took place in 1999 as a rescue mission for Hubble, while Servicing Mission 3B was aimed at updating Hubble. For the first time since Hubble was launched, the telescope was powered down by controllers on the ground in order to change out the Power Control Unit, which manages the power for the spacecraft. The Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) and new solar panels were also installed on Hubble.


 

April 30, 2002 – Advanced Camera for Surveys first images released

Early release observations taken by Hubble’s newly installed Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) were published. Some of the images are now Hubble classics, showing objects such as the Cone Nebula, Mice galaxies and Tadpole galaxy.


September 19, 2002 - Crab pulsar dynamics observed

Astronomers release Hubble observations taken in conjunction with NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory showing shocks and other dynamic features produced by matter and antimatter propelled to near the speed of light by the Crab pulsar. The pulsar is a rapidly rotating neutron star the size of Manhattan at the heart of the Crab Nebula.


2003


February 1, 2003 – Space shuttle Columbia lost during reentry

Disaster struck as the space shuttle Columbia disintegrated upon reentering Earth’s atmosphere after a 15-day mission in space, killing all seven astronauts on board. Hubble’s fifth servicing mission was canceled in the aftermath of this tragedy.


 

March 12, 2003 – Evaporating planet discovered

Hubble astronomers announced that they had observed, for the first time ever, the atmosphere of an exoplanet evaporating into space. The evaporating planet, called HD 209458b, is a “hot Jupiter,” a type of giant gaseous planet that orbits very closely around its parent star. Hubble’s observations reveal a hot, hydrogen-based atmosphere evaporating like a comet tail trailing behind the planet.



 

March 26, 2003 – Light echo recorded

Astronomers released Hubble images of a “light echo” around a star called V838 Monocerotis, which in January 2002 had suddenly swelled in brightness, giving off 600,000 times more light than our Sun does. Hubble’s images showed light from this outburst illuminating clouds of dust around the star as the light traveled outward.


2004


January 16, 2004 – Servicing Mission 4 canceled

Hubble’s fifth and final servicing mission (Servicing Mission 4) was officially canceled. The cancellation followed the Columbia disaster of February 2003 and publication of the final report from the accident’s review board.


 

March 9, 2004 – Hubble Ultra Deep Field released

The Hubble Ultra Deep Field observation was released, showing 10,000 galaxies in a tiny section of the sky. Made from a series of exposures that add up to a million seconds of observation time, the image was the deepest portrait of the universe yet taken and revealed some of the first galaxies dating back to the period shortly after the big bang.


 

2005


July 4, 2005 – Deep Impact collided with a comet

NASA’s Deep Impact spacecraft released a 820-pound projectile targeted at the comet 9P/Tempel 1. Hubble observations of the impact, released later that day, showed visible-light images of the comet before and after impact.


 

August 31, 2005 – Hubble began “two-gyro” science operations

Hubble’s operations team shut down one of the spacecraft’s three functional gyroscopes. This put the telescope into a two-gyro operation mode in order to preserve the operating life of the third gyro and extend Hubble’s science observations.


 

October 31, 2005 – Two small moons of Pluto discovered

Astronomers released discovery images from Hubble showing two previously unseen moons orbiting the dwarf planet Pluto. The discovery of the small moons provided insight into the nature and evolution of the Pluto system and early Kuiper Belt, a region of icy and rocky bodies beyond Neptune. Hubble would go on to discover a total of four moons around Pluto.


 

December 22, 2005 – Moons and rings around Uranus discovered

Hubble observations of the planet Uranus were released revealing two never-before-seen, giant, dusty rings around the planet as well as two previously unknown moons, named Mab and Cupid. Hubble also showed that the orbits of Uranus’ inner moons had changed significantly over the previous decade.

2006


April 18–20, 2006 – Breakup of comet witnessed

Hubble observed the disintegration of comet 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 3 as it approached the Sun. The observations provided a new opportunity to study the breakup of a comet nucleus.


 

August 21, 2006 – Direct proof of dark matter observed

Astronomers using Hubble, NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and ground-based telescopes released direct proof of dark matter in the galaxy cluster 1E 0657-56, also known as the Bullet Cluster.


October 31, 2006 – Servicing Mission 4 reinstated

Hubble’s fifth and final servicing mission was reinstated as STS-125, during which space shuttle astronauts would visit the telescope to extend the life of the observatory and improve its scientific capabilities.


2007


October 29 – November 4, 2007 - Mystery comet observed

Hubble observed the bright core of comet 17P/Holmes, which mysteriously brightened by nearly a millionfold over a 24-hour period in late October. Hubble’s observations uncovered details as small as 33 miles (54 kilometers) across, revealed spurs of dust emanating from the comet’s nucleus, and showed the cloud of dust encircling the comet (called the coma) disperse and fade over several days.


 

December 11, 2007 – Hazy extrasolar atmosphere discovered

Astronomers announce that, for the first time, Hubble had detected strong evidence of hazes in the atmosphere of a planet orbiting a distant star. When the planet, called HD 189733b, passed in front of its parent star, Hubble was able to take spectral “fingerprints” of the planet’s atmosphere.


 

2008


March 19, 2008 – First organic molecule detected on an exoplanet

Hubble astronomers announced their discovery of methane in the atmosphere of an exoplanet. Found on a Jupiter-sized planet named HD 189733b, this was the first organic molecule identified in the atmosphere of a planet orbiting a star other than the Sun.


 

August 11, 2008 – Hubble completed its 100,000th orbit

At 11:42:05 UTC (Coordinated Universal Time), Hubble completed its 100,000th orbit in space. It took a little over 18 years for the telescope to achieve this many orbits. To commemorate this milestone, Hubble imaged a star-forming nebula in a nearby galaxy called the Large Magellanic Cloud.


September 27, 2008 – Hubble entered safe mode

Hubble entered safe mode following a failure in a science data formatter, which prepares science observations for transmission to the ground. (In safe mode, the spacecraft maintains its health and safety by pointing its solar panels toward the Sun and turning its antennas to allow for communications, but it does not make any new science observations.) The failure delayed Hubble’s final servicing mission, which had been scheduled to launch less than a month later, while the mission team developed a solution. During Servicing Mission 4, astronauts replaced the failed unit with a spare that was on the ground.


November 13, 2008 – Visible-light images of an exoplanet released

Astronomers released what might be the first-ever visible-light images of an extrasolar planet. Taken by Hubble, the images showed a planet moving in its orbit around the star Fomalhaut, located 25 light-years from Earth.



2009


May 11–24, 2009 – Fifth servicing mission conducted

Astronauts aboard space shuttle Atlantis completed the fifth and final servicing mission for Hubble, designated STS-125 and called Servicing Mission 4. Mission highlights included the installation of the Wide Field Camera 3 and Cosmic Origins Spectrograph, as well as the first-ever in-space repair of science instruments (the Advanced Camera for Surveys and the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph). The crew also replaced batteries, gyroscopes and other hardware so that Hubble would continue to operate for many years to come.


September 9, 2009 – Post-Servicing Mission 4 observations released

Several early release observations taken with the newly installed Wide Field Camera 3 and other new or repaired Hubble instruments were shared with the world. Some of the objects featured were the Butterfly Nebula, Stephan’s Quintet and the core of the densely packed star cluster Omega Centauri. The new instruments installed during Servicing Mission 4 are more sensitive to light than earlier instruments and improved Hubble’s observing efficiency significantly.



2010


February 25–28, 2010 – Large asteroid Vesta observed

Hubble captured images of the large asteroid Vesta as part of preparations for the Dawn spacecraft’s rendezvous with the asteroid in July 2011. Vesta is the second largest object that resides in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Hubble’s observations revealed features on the asteroid and showed that Vesta’s pole was tilted about four degrees more to the asteroid’s east than previously thought, meaning seasons would change later on Vesta than expected.


 

August 19, 2010 – Cosmic lens used for the first time to probe dark energy

Astronomers using Hubble announced that they had devised a new method of measuring dark energy, a mysterious force that pushes our universe apart at increasing speeds. Hubble observed Abell 1689, a massive cluster of galaxies that acts like a giant magnifying lens in space. By measuring how the light of galaxies located behind Abell 1689 was bent by the cluster’s gravity, astronomers could investigate the effect dark energy had on the geometry of space along the light’s path.


2011


July 4, 2011 – One millionth science observation made

After 21 years in space, Hubble completed its one millionth science observation. The observation was a search for water in the atmosphere of the exoplanet HAT-P-7b, located 1,000 light-years away from Earth.


 

October 4, 2011 – Nobel Prize awarded for discovery of accelerating universe

Hubble science team member Adam Riess and fellow astronomers won the Nobel Prize in Physics from the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences for discovering that the expansion of the universe is accelerating. The astronomers used Hubble data, as well as data from several ground-based telescopes.


 

December 6, 2011 – 10,000th Hubble science paper published

The 10,000th science paper using Hubble data was published, solidifying Hubble’s position as one of the most prolific astronomical endeavors in history.


 

2012


May 31, 2012 –Milky Way–Andromeda collision determined to be head-on

Astronomers announced that our Milky Way galaxy is destined for a head-on collision with the Andromeda galaxy in about 4 billion years. The Andromeda galaxy is currently 2.5 million light-years away but is falling toward the Milky Way under the mutual pull of gravity between the two galaxies.


 

July 11, 2012 - Fifth Pluto moon discovered

Astronomers using Hubble announced their discovery of a fifth moon orbiting the dwarf planet Pluto. Estimated to be irregular in shape and just 6 to 15 miles across, the newfound moon orbits in the same plane as the other satellites in the system. Hubble discovered four of the five known moons of Pluto in preparation for the New Horizons spacecraft’s flyby in 2015.


 

September 25, 2012 – Hubble eXtreme Deep Field released

The deepest view of the universe yet captured, the eXtreme Deep Field, was released. The photo was created by combining 10 years of Hubble photographs taken of a patch of sky at the center of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field. The faintest galaxies in the image are one ten-billionth the brightness of what the human eye is capable of seeing.



2013


April 19, 2013 – Horsehead Nebula infrared image released

An infrared image of the Horsehead Nebula from Hubble was released to celebrate the telescope’s 23rd anniversary in space. The nebula is a small part of the vast star-forming complex in the constellation Orion and is expected to disintegrate in about 5 million years.


November 7, 2013 – Asteroid found to have comet-like tails

Astronomers released Hubble images of a unique, never-before-seen type of object: an asteroid that sprouted six comet-like tails.


 

 

December 12, 2013 – Water vapor plumes observed on Europa

Astronomers announced that Hubble had observed water vapor plumes rising above the frigid south polar region of Jupiter’s moon Europa. The observations provided the first strong evidence of water plumes erupting off the moon’s surface.


2014


January 7, 2014 – First Frontier Field image released

The first of Hubble’s Frontier Fields images was released, featuring the galaxy cluster Abell 2744. The Frontier Fields multi-year program obtained super-deep views of the universe using long exposures from Hubble. This image of Abell 2744 was the deepest-ever picture taken of a cluster of galaxies and revealed some of the faintest and youngest galaxies yet detected.


 

March 6, 2014 – Disintegrating asteroid imaged

Hubble observations were released showing the never-before-seen breakup of an asteroid. A series of Hubble images taken over months revealed that the asteroid, called P/2013 R3, had broken into as many as 10 smaller pieces and was continuing to break apart. The images also showed that the fragments were drifting away from each other at a mere one mile per hour, suggesting that a collision was unlikely to be the cause of the breakup.


May 15, 2014 – Great Red Spot found to be shrinking

Scientists released Hubble images showing that Jupiter’s Great Red Spot is smaller than ever seen before, signifying that the giant storm is shrinking. Hubble’s observations also revealed that the spot is changing shape from an oval to a circle.


June 3, 2014 – Hubble Ultra Deep Field updated

Hubble premiered a comprehensive picture of the evolving universe, adding ultraviolet observations to the previously released Hubble Ultra Deep Field. The addition of ultraviolet light provided a missing link in the history of star formation and updated the deep field to cover the entire range of light that Hubble can observe.


October 15, 2014 – Potential targets identified for New Horizons

Astronomers announced that they had used Hubble to discover three objects in the Kuiper Belt that NASA’s New Horizons mission could study following the spacecraft’s flyby of Pluto in 2015. The New Horizons team would later choose one of these targets for a rendezvous on January 1, 2019.


2015


January 5, 2015 – Hubble revisited iconic “Pillars of Creation”

New Hubble images of the iconic Pillars of Creation in the Eagle Nebula were released to the public. Hubble made its first observations of these star-forming pillars in 1995. The newest images provided a more detailed visible-light view of the pillars and presented an infrared view, which revealed stars hidden within and behind the towers of gas and dust.


 

January 5, 2015 – Panoramic view of Andromeda galaxy released

Astronomers presented the largest Hubble image to date, featuring a sweeping view of a portion of the Andromeda galaxy. Assembled into a mosaic using 7,398 Hubble exposures, the image includes over 100 million stars and thousands of star clusters within the galaxy’s disk.


December 16, 2015 – First-ever predicted supernova captured

Hubble images were released capturing light from the first-ever predicted supernova explosion. Astronomers predicted the supernova’s appearance by studying how a galaxy cluster’s immense gravity was bending and magnifying the light from the supernova (which exploded in a galaxy behind the cluster), causing it to appear in different locations at different times.


2016


March 3, 2016 – Cosmic distance record broken

Astronomers using Hubble announced that they had shattered the cosmic distance record by measuring the farthest galaxy ever seen in the universe at that time. The bright, infant galaxy, named GN-z11, was seen as it was 13.4 billion years in the past, just 400 million years after the big bang.


 

April 26, 2016 – Hubble discovered moon of dwarf planet Makemake

Scientists announced that they had used Hubble to discover a small, dark moon orbiting Makemake, the second brightest icy dwarf planet in the Kuiper Belt (after Pluto). The observations showed that the moon, nicknamed MK 2, orbits approximately 13,000 miles from Makemake. The moon’s discovery provided valuable information on the dwarf planet system, such as the mass for the system and insight into its evolution.


2017


February 22, 2017 – Hubble studied atmospheres of Earth-sized exoplanets

Astronomers announced that they had discovered seven Earth-sized planets orbiting a star called TRAPPIST-1 using the Spitzer Space Telescope and that Hubble had examined the atmospheres of four of the planets, including the three planets that resided in the star’s habitable zone. Hubble’s observations found no evidence for puffy, hydrogen-rich atmospheres around the two innermost planets, suggesting that those planets are rocky.


 

October 16, 2017 – Hubble observed source of gravitational waves

Scientists presented Hubble images showing light from a source of gravitational waves. The gravitational waves were produced when two neutron stars merged in the galaxy NGC 1993, located about 130 million light-years from Earth. Hubble, along with many other space and ground-based telescopes, observed the resulting “kilonova” after the gravitational waves were detected. It was the first time light from a source of gravitational waves had ever been detected.


2018


April 2, 2018 – Hubble revealed farthest star ever seen

Astronomers released Hubble images of the farthest star ever seen, nicknamed Icarus. The enormous blue star resides in a very distant spiral galaxy and is so far away that its light has taken 9 billion years to reach Earth. Hubble was able to spot Icarus because the star’s light was magnified by an intervening cluster of galaxies in a phenomenon called gravitational lensing.


June 27, 2018 – First known interstellar object studied

Results from Hubble observations of ‘Oumuamua, the first known interstellar object to pass through our solar system, were announced. Hubble, along with other space and ground-based telescopes, measured the object’s trajectory and found that it gained an unexpected boost of speed. A possible explanation is that ‘Oumuamua expelled gaseous material like a comet, which influenced its path.


October 3, 2018 – Possible exomoon found

Astronomers announced that the Kepler and Hubble space telescopes had gathered evidence of a possible moon orbiting a planet outside our solar system. Potentially as large as Neptune, the suspected “exomoon” accompanies a planet several times more massive than Jupiter called Kepler-1625b, which orbits a Sun-like star 8,000 light-years from Earth.


2019


September 13, 2019 – Water vapor detected on habitable-zone exoplanetillustration of exoplanet

Astronomers presented the first detection of water vapor in the atmosphere of an exoplanet orbiting within its star’s “habitable zone” (where temperatures are just right for liquid water to exist on a planet’s surface). Hubble detected water vapor in the atmosphere of a planet called K2-18b, which orbits a small red dwarf star about 110 light-years away.


Composed by

Abhinav P Pradeep, wayanad, Kerala, India

Email:Abhinavppindia@gmail.com

Twitter: Abhinav P Pradeep

(@Abhinavppindia)

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