Browse All : Andromeda from 2002

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Hubble Astronomer Creates Sp …
Title Hubble Astronomer Creates Spectacular Galaxy Collision Visualization for the National Air and Space Museum
Hubble Discovers Black Holes …
Title Hubble Discovers Black Holes in Unexpected Places
General Information What is a Space Science Update? Major Hubble discoveries on NASA television ... Astronomers explain their Hubble discoveries at a press conference, called a Space Science Update (SSU), broadcast on NASA television. The SSU includes a question and answer session with members of the media. Back to top [ #top ]
Hubble Discovers Black Holes …
Title Hubble Discovers Black Holes in Unexpected Places
General Information What is a Space Science Update? Major Hubble discoveries on NASA television ... Astronomers explain their Hubble discoveries at a press conference, called a Space Science Update (SSU), broadcast on NASA television. The SSU includes a question and answer session with members of the media. Back to top [ #top ]
Hubble Discovers Black Holes …
Title Hubble Discovers Black Holes in Unexpected Places
General Information What is a Space Science Update? Major Hubble discoveries on NASA television ... Astronomers explain their Hubble discoveries at a press conference, called a Space Science Update (SSU), broadcast on NASA television. The SSU includes a question and answer session with members of the media. Back to top [ #top ]
Hubble Discovers Black Holes …
Title Hubble Discovers Black Holes in Unexpected Places
General Information What is a Space Science Update? Major Hubble discoveries on NASA television ... Astronomers explain their Hubble discoveries at a press conference, called a Space Science Update (SSU), broadcast on NASA television. The SSU includes a question and answer session with members of the media. Back to top [ #top ]
Hubble Discovers Black Holes …
Title Hubble Discovers Black Holes in Unexpected Places
General Information What is a Space Science Update? Major Hubble discoveries on NASA television ... Astronomers explain their Hubble discoveries at a press conference, called a Space Science Update (SSU), broadcast on NASA television. The SSU includes a question and answer session with members of the media. Back to top [ #top ]
Hubble Discovers Black Holes …
Title Hubble Discovers Black Holes in Unexpected Places
General Information What is a Space Science Update? Major Hubble discoveries on NASA television ... Astronomers explain their Hubble discoveries at a press conference, called a Space Science Update (SSU), broadcast on NASA television. The SSU includes a question and answer session with members of the media. Back to top [ #top ]
Hubble Discovers Black Holes …
Title Hubble Discovers Black Holes in Unexpected Places
General Information What is a Space Science Update? Major Hubble discoveries on NASA television ... Astronomers explain their Hubble discoveries at a press conference, called a Space Science Update (SSU), broadcast on NASA television. The SSU includes a question and answer session with members of the media. Back to top [ #top ]
Hubble Discovers Black Holes …
Title Hubble Discovers Black Holes in Unexpected Places
General Information What is a Space Science Update? Major Hubble discoveries on NASA television ... Astronomers explain their Hubble discoveries at a press conference, called a Space Science Update (SSU), broadcast on NASA television. The SSU includes a question and answer session with members of the media. Back to top [ #top ]
Hubble Discovers Black Holes …
Title Hubble Discovers Black Holes in Unexpected Places
General Information What is a Space Science Update? Major Hubble discoveries on NASA television ... Astronomers explain their Hubble discoveries at a press conference, called a Space Science Update (SSU), broadcast on NASA television. The SSU includes a question and answer session with members of the media. Back to top [ #top ]
Hubble Discovers Black Holes …
Title Hubble Discovers Black Holes in Unexpected Places
General Information What is a Space Science Update? Major Hubble discoveries on NASA television ... Astronomers explain their Hubble discoveries at a press conference, called a Space Science Update (SSU), broadcast on NASA television. The SSU includes a question and answer session with members of the media. Back to top [ #top ]
Hubble Astronomer Creates Sp …
Title Hubble Astronomer Creates Spectacular Galaxy Collision Visualization for the National Air and Space Museum
Deepest View of Space Yields …
Title Deepest View of Space Yields Young Stars in Andromeda Halo
Deepest View of Space Yields …
Title Deepest View of Space Yields Young Stars in Andromeda Halo
Deepest View of Space Yields …
Title Deepest View of Space Yields Young Stars in Andromeda Halo
Deepest View of Space Yields …
Title Deepest View of Space Yields Young Stars in Andromeda Halo
Deepest View of Space Yields …
Title Deepest View of Space Yields Young Stars in Andromeda Halo
Deepest View of Space Yields …
Title Deepest View of Space Yields Young Stars in Andromeda Halo
Deepest View of Space Yields …
Title Deepest View of Space Yields Young Stars in Andromeda Halo
Deepest View of Space Yields …
Title Deepest View of Space Yields Young Stars in Andromeda Halo
Deepest View of Space Yields …
Title Deepest View of Space Yields Young Stars in Andromeda Halo
Deepest View of Space Yields …
Title Deepest View of Space Yields Young Stars in Andromeda Halo
Deepest View of Space Yields …
Title Deepest View of Space Yields Young Stars in Andromeda Halo
Deepest View of Space Yields …
Title Deepest View of Space Yields Young Stars in Andromeda Halo
Deepest View of Space Yields …
Title Deepest View of Space Yields Young Stars in Andromeda Halo
Hubble Space Telescope Image …
Name of Image Hubble Space Telescope Image of NGC 4676, "The Mice
Date of Image 2002-04-07
Full Description The Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS), the newest camera on the Hubble Space Telescope, has captured a spectacular pair of galaxies. Located 300 million light-years away in the constellation Coma Berenices, the colliding galaxies have been nicknamed "The Mice" because of the long tails of stars and gas emanating from each galaxy. Otherwise known as NGC 4676, the pair will eventually merge into a single giant galaxy. In the galaxy at left, the bright blue patch is resolved into a vigorous cascade of clusters and associations of young, hot blue stars, whose formation has been triggered by the tidal forces of the gravitational interaction. The clumps of young stars in the long, straight tidal tail (upper right) are separated by fainter regions of material. These dim regions suggest that the clumps of stars have formed from the gravitational collapse of the gas and dust that once occupied those areas. Some of the clumps have luminous masses comparable to dwarf galaxies that orbit the halo of our own Milky Way Galaxy. Computer simulations by astronomers show that we are seeing two near identical spiral galaxies approximately 160 million years after their closest encounter. The simulations also show that the pair will eventually merge, forming a large, nearly spherical galaxy (known as an elliptical galaxy). The Mice presage what may happen to our own Milky Way several billion years from now when it collides with our nearest large neighbor, the Andromeda Galaxy (M31). This picture is assembled from three sets of images taken on April 7, 2002, in blue, orange, and near-infrared filters. Credit: NASA, H. Fort (JHU), G. Illingworth (USCS/LO), M. Clampin (STScI), G. Hartig (STScI), the ACS Science Team, and ESA.
Island Universe, Cosmic Sand
Title Island Universe, Cosmic Sand
Explanation On August 13, 2002, while counting Perseid meteors [ http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2003/ 17jul_perseids2003.htm ] under dark [ http://www.darksky.org/ida/darksky/ index.html ], early morning Arizona skies, Rick Scott set out to photograph [ http://members.cox.net/rmscott/ gallery_space_sky02.html ] their fleeting but fiery trails. The equipment he used included a telephoto lens and fast color film. After 21 pictures he'd caught only two meteors, but luckily this was one of them. Tracking the sky, his ten minute long exposure shows a field of many stars in our own Milky Way galaxy [ http://www.seds.org/messier/ more/mw.html ], most too faint to be seen by the unaided eye. Flashing [ http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap990219.html ] from lower left to upper right, the bright meteor would have been an easy eyeful though, as friction with Earth's atmosphere vaporized [ http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap020816.html ] the hurtling grain of cosmic sand [ http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap001117.html ], a piece of dust from Comet Swift-Tuttle [ http://comets.amsmeteors.org/comets/pcomets/ 109p.html ]. Just above and left of center, well beyond the stars of the Milky Way, lies the island universe [ http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap020518.html ] known as M31 or the Andromeda galaxy. The visible meteor trail begins about 100 kilometers above Earth's surface, one of the closest celestial objects seen in the sky. In contrast, Andromeda [ http://www.seds.org/messier/m/ m031.html ], about 2 million light-years away, is the most distant object easily visible to the naked-eye.
A Galaxy is not a Comet
Title A Galaxy is not a Comet
Explanation This gorgeous galaxy and comet portrait [ http://science.nasa.gov/spaceweather/comets/ gallery_iz.html ] was recorded on April 5th, 2002, in the skies over the Oriental Pyrenees near Figueres, Spain [ http://www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/ sp.html ]. From a site above 1,100 meters, astrophotographer [ http://www.skylook.net/nav/indexe.htm ] Juan Carlos Casado used a guided time exposure, fast film, and a telephoto lens to capture the predicted conjunction of the bright Comet Ikeya-Zhang [ http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap020404.html ] (right) and the Andromeda Galaxy [ http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap021021.html ] (left). This stunning celestial scene would also have been a rewarding one for the influential 18th century comet hunter Charles Messier [ http://www.seds.org/messier/xtra/history/ biograph.html ]. While Messier scanned French skies for comets, he carefully cataloged positions of things which were fuzzy and comet-like in appearance but did not move against the background stars and so were definitely not comets. The Andromeda Galaxy [ http://nedwww.ipac.caltech.edu/level5/ANDROMEDA_Atlas/ frames.html ], also known as M31, is the 31st object in his famous not-a-comet catalog [ http://seds.lpl.arizona.edu/messier/xtra/history/ m-cat.html ]. Not-a-comet object number 110 [ http://www.seds.org/messier/m/ m110.html ], a late addition to Messier's catalog, is one of Andromeda's small satellite galaxies, and can be seen here just below M31. Our modern [ http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/diamond_jubilee/ debate20.html ] understanding [ http://www.astr.ua.edu/goodies/data_resources/ galaxies.text ] holds that the Andromeda galaxy is a large spiral galaxy some 2 million light-years distant [ http://www.anzwers.org/free/universe/localgr.html ]. The photogenic Comet Ikeya-Zhang [ http://www.stardate.org/nightsky/comet_IZ.html ], then a lovely sight in early morning skies was about 80 million kilometers (4 light-minutes) from planet Earth.
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