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When Galileo used his homemade telescope 400 years ago to view mountains on the Moon, satellites circling Jupiter, and myriad stars in our Milky Way Galaxy, he launched a revolution that changed our view of an Earth-centered universe.
The launch of NASA's Hubble Space Telescope aboard the space shuttle Discovery 15 years ago initiated another revolution in astronomy. For the first time, a large telescope that sees in visible light began orbiting above Earth's distorting atmosphere, which blurs starlight and makes images appear fuzzy. Astronomers anticipated great discoveries from Hubble. The telescope has delivered as promised and continues serving up new discoveries.
Astronomers and astrophysicists using Hubble data have published more than 4,000 scientific papers, on topics from the solar system to the very distant universe. The following list highlights some of Hubble's greatest achievements.
The Universe Is Caught Speeding (Hubble Press Release 2004-12)
Hubble played a key role in discovering that a mysterious form of energy
called dark energy is acting like a cosmic gas pedal, accelerating the
universe's expansion rate. Dark energy shoves galaxies away from each
other at ever-increasing speeds and works in opposition to gravity.
Hubble observations of distant exploding stars called supernovas placed
the most significant constraints to date on the nature of dark energy,
revealing that it does appear to be a constant presence as first
anticipated early last century by scientist Albert Einstein. Astronomers
understand almost nothing about dark energy, even though it appears to
comprise about 70 percent of the universe.
Tell Us Your Age (Hubble Press Release 1994-49)
Some people hate to reveal their age, and the universe, it seems, is no
different. Before Hubble was launched, astronomers had been trying for
several years to pin down the universe's age. They came up with a wide
age range, 10 to 20 billion years. One of Hubble's key duties was to
help astronomers determine a precise age for the universe. The telescope
helped astronomers accomplish that goal, narrowing the universe's age to
13 to 14 billion years old, an accuracy of about 10 percent. Astronomers
made observations of Cepheid variable stars pulsating stars used to
measure vast distances in the Virgo and other clusters to establish
the expansion rate and the universe's age.
Postcards from the Edge of Space (Hubble Press Release 2004-07)
Hubble provided astronomers with a "scrapbook" full of snapshots of the
early universe. The scrapbook photographs revealed "toddler" galaxies
that existed billions of years ago when the universe was young. The
telescope snapped the pictures of the "deep" universe in a series of
unique observations, the Hubble Deep Fields, the Great Observatories
Origins Deep Survey, and the Hubble Ultra Deep Field. The observations
provided the deepest view of the cosmos in visible, ultraviolet, and
near-infrared light. In the most recent foray into the farthest regions
of the universe, Hubble uncovered 10,000 galaxies, some of which existed
400 to 800 million years after the Big Bang. Unlike our Milky Way
Galaxy, the galaxies spied in the Hubble observations take many other
shapes. Some are shaped like toothpicks, others like links on a
bracelet. Through these observations, astronomers can follow the
evolution of the star-formation rate and witness how galaxies form. By
studying galaxies at different eras, astronomers can see how galaxies
change over time.
Worlds Beyond Our Sun (Hubble Press Releases 2001-38 and 2000-33)
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Astronomers using ground-based telescopes to hunt for planets outside
our solar system, or extrasolar planets, have nabbed more than 100 alien
worlds. But they needed the keen "eye" of Hubble to make the first
direct measurement of the chemical makeup of an extrasolar planet's
atmosphere. The telescope detected the elements sodium, hydrogen,
carbon, and oxygen in the atmosphere of a Jupiter-sized planet. The
unique observation demonstrates that Hubble and other telescopes can
sample the chemical makeup of the atmospheres of alien worlds.
Astronomers could use the same technique someday to determine whether
life exists on extrasolar planets. Besides testing the atmosphere of an
extrasolar planet, Hubble also made precise measurements of the masses
of two distant worlds. Astronomers believe that one of those worlds is
the oldest known planet. The planet, whose estimated age is 13 billion
years, is more than twice as old as 4.5-billion-year-old Earth.
Monster Black Holes Are Everywhere (Hubble Press Release 1999-43)
The hubs of most galaxies have a mammoth resident that loves to gobble
up anything that wanders near it. This sleeping monster, Hubble
observations confirmed, is a black hole with a mass millions to billions
times that of our Sun. Not only are black holes everywhere, but they
also have an intimate relationship with their host galaxies. Hubble
observations revealed that a tight relationship exists between the
masses of the central black holes and those of the galactic bulges of
old stars, gas, and dust that surround them. Monstrous galaxies, for
example, have titanic black holes. This close relationship may be
evidence that black holes grew with their galaxies, feasting on a
measured diet of gas and stars swirling around the hearts of those
galaxies.
The Biggest 'Bangs' Since the Big Bang (Hubble Press Release 1999-09)
Imagine a powerful burst of light and other radiation that can burn away
the ozone in Earth's atmosphere. Luckily, bursts of light that strong
occur so far away they will not scorch our planet. These bursts of light
are called gamma-ray bursts. They may represent the most powerful
explosions in the universe since the Big Bang, the explosive birth of
our universe. Hubble images showed that these brief flashes of radiation
come from far-flung galaxies that are forming stars at enormously high
rates. By pinpointing the host galaxies, Hubble also identified the
sources of the "bursts": the collapse of massive stars.
Quasars, the Light Fantastic (Hubble Press Release 1996-35)
Quasars have been so elusive and mysterious that the hunt to define them
would have taxed even the superior analytical skills of detective
Sherlock Holmes. Since their discovery in 1963, astronomers have been
trying to crack the mystery of how these compact dynamos of light and
other radiation, which lie at the outer reaches of the universe, produce
so much energy. Quasars are no larger than our solar system but outshine
galaxies of hundreds of billions of stars. These light beacons have left
trails of evidence and plenty of clues, but scientists have only just
begun to understand their behavior. Astronomers using Hubble tracked
down the "homes" of quasars, proving that these dynamos reside in the
centers of galaxies.
Planet Construction Zones (Hubble Press Releases 1995-45 and 1994-24)
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Peering into the gaseous clouds in the Milky Way Galaxy where stars are
born, Hubble discovered that many young stars are surrounded by
flattened disks of gas and dust. These disks, now known as "proplyds"
(short for protoplanetary disks), are the likely birthplaces of new
planetary systems. Hubble provided visual proof that pancake-shaped dust
disks around young stars are common, suggesting that the building blocks
for planet formation are in place.
A Shattered Comet Rocks Jupiter (Hubble Press Release 1994-34)
Imagine setting off every atomic bomb on Earth all at once. Now imagine
repeating such an apocalyptic explosion two dozen times in a week!
Unleashing such energy would destroy Earth's surface, but the giant
planet Jupiter hardly flinched when it underwent such a catastrophe in
1994. Hubble provided a ringside seat to a once-in-a-millennium event
when two dozen chunks of a comet smashed into Jupiter. Hubble provided
dramatic images of massive explosions that sent towering mushroom-shaped
fireballs of hot gas into the Jovian sky. The doomed comet, called
Shoemaker-Levy 9, had been pulled apart two years earlier by Jupiter's
gravity. Each impact left temporary black sooty scars in Jupiter's
planetary clouds.
Going out in a Blaze of Glory (Hubble Press Releases 2004-27 and 2004-09)
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A Sun-like star's death is as colorful as maple leaves in autumn. Sun-like stars die gracefully by ejecting their outer gaseous
layers into space. Eventually, the outer layers begin to glow in vibrant
colors of red, blue, and green. The colorful glowing shroud is called a
planetary nebula. Hubble revealed unprecedented details of this process.
Ground-based images suggested that many of these objects had simple
shapes, but Hubble showed that their shapes are more complex. Hubble's
keen "eye" disclosed that planetary nebulas are like snowflakes: no two
are alike. Turning its vision to the tattered remains of a massive star
that exploded as a supernova in 1987, Hubble found three mysterious
rings of material encircling the doomed star. During the years since the
eruption, Hubble spied brightened spots on the middle ring caused by
material ejected from the explosion slamming into it.
In its 15 years of viewing the sky, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has taken more than 700,000 exposures and probed more than 22,000 celestial objects.
The Hubble Ultra Deep Field (HUDF) is the most observed area of the sky. Hubble spent more than 500 hours viewing the HUDF, snapping more than 1,100 photographs.
Hubble has whirled around Earth nearly 88,000 times, racking up 2.3 billion miles. That is like making about 400,000 round trips from New York City to Los Angeles.
The telescope's observations have produced 23 terabytes of data, equal to the amount of text in 23 million novels. The Hubble data would fill two Library of Congress book collections.
Each day the orbiting observatory generates enough data about 15 gigabytes to fill more than three DVDs.
In Hubble's 15-year lifetime, about 3,900 astronomers from all over the world have used the telescope to probe the universe.
Astronomers have published more than 4,000 scientific papers on Hubble results.