NASA Celebrates Edwin Hubbles Discovery of a New Universe Edwin Hubble was the first astronomer to take the initial steps that would ultimately lead to the Hubble Space Telescope, revealing a seemingly infinite ocean of galaxies
Amazing Space - Hubbles Next Discovery - You Decide After more than 140,000 votes were cast by participants around the world, the galaxy group Arp 274 emerged the winner of the "Hubble's Next Discovery -- You Decide" contest
Quasar 3C 273 | HubbleSite A Hubble Space Telescope image of the core of quasar 3C 273 A coronagraph on Hubble blocks out the glare coming from the supermassive black hole at the heart of the quasar
Size Distribution for Unknown Asteroids in Hubble Asteroid Hunter . . . This graph is based on Hubble Space Telescope archival data that was used to identify a largely unseen population of very small asteroids in their tracks The asteroids were not the intended targets, but instead photobombed background stars and galaxies in Hubble images
Hubble M31 PHAT+PHAST Mosaic | HubbleSite This is the largest photomosaic ever assembled from Hubble Space Telescope observations It is a panoramic view of the neighboring Andromeda galaxy, located 2 5 million light-years away
NASAs Hubble Traces Hidden History of Andromeda Galaxy Now, a century later, the space telescope named for Hubble has accomplished the most comprehensive survey of this enticing empire of stars The Hubble telescope is yielding new clues to the evolutionary history of Andromeda, and it looks markedly different from the Milky Way's history
MACS 0416 (Hubble + Webb Compass Image) | HubbleSite Image of galaxy cluster MACS0416 captured in visible light by Hubble’s ACS and WFC3 and in infrared light by Webb’s NIRCam, with compass arrows, scale bar, and color key for reference
Hubble Space Telescope Captures First Direct Image of a Star The Hubble image reveals a huge ultraviolet atmosphere with a mysterious hot spot on the stellar behemoth's surface The enormous bright spot, twice the diameter of the Earth's orbit, is at least 2,000 Kelvin degrees hotter than the surface of the star